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Chapter 4: Demography. aka Population Studies or Population Science The study of human populations Size Composition Distribution Causes and consequences of changes in those characteristics. Demography is interdisciplinary. Many factors impact population Demographers can be trained in
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Chapter 4: Demography • aka Population Studies or Population Science • The study of human populations • Size • Composition • Distribution • Causes and consequences of changes in those characteristics
Demography is interdisciplinary • Many factors impact population • Demographers can be trained in • Sociology • Economics • Biology • Geography • History • Health sciences • ANTHROPOLOGY
Population measures • Fertility • Mortality • Migration
Fertility • Number of births that occur to an individual or in a population • Worldwide fertility ranges from 1.3 in Spain to 7.4 in Niger • US fertility is approx. 2.1 • Hutterite fertility was 12
Fecundity • Physiological ability to have children • Fecundity ranges from 0-30 in females to 0-infinity in males • Factors which limit reproduction • Cultural • Social • Economic • Epidemiological
Intermediate variables affecting fertility • Davis and Blake 1956 Fecundity • Ability to have intercourse, conceive, and carry to term • Sexual unions • Formation and dissolution, age at first intercourse, proportion of women in unions, time spent outside a union, coital frequency, celibacy, temporary separations • Birth control • Contraceptive use, sterilization, abortion
Industrialized countries • Contraceptive use and abortion most important factors
Developing countries • Infecundity due to STD’s, HIV/AIDS, lactational amenoreah (Interbirth interval), and postpartum abstinence (postpartum taboo) most important factors
Fertility patterns • This implies that people in industrialized countries want to limit their fertility and people in developing countries are limited by exogenous factors
Measures of fertility • Period rates • Cohort rates
Period rates • Total fertility rate (TFR) • Average number of children born per women in a population • Replacement level fertility • Fertility required to keep a population at its current level • Crude birth rate (CBR) • Number of births per 1000 population • General fertility rate (GFR) • Number of births per woman • Net reproductive rate (R0) • Current births plus expected births (RV)
Period rates cont’d. • Most of these measures focus on women 15-49 years old. Why?
Cohort rates • Completed fertility rate (CFR) or completed family size (CFS) • Number of live births to a woman who has completed reproduction (menopause)
Variation in fertility • Within a society or political entity • Between a society or political entity • Between men and women in the same society
Mortality: Death • Usually measured as • Crude death rate: number of deaths per 1,000 population • Worldwide range from 2 in the Persian Gulf states to 30 in civil war torn Sierra Leone • n US about 9 per 1,000
Death rate • Highly influence by age-structure of the population. • Where a higher percentage of the population is older, death rates tend to be higher • What about the effect of HIV/AIDS in relation to the age-specific death rate?
Life Expectancy • Number of years members of an age class can expect to live based on the current death rates of older age classes • Often misused, is a period rate like TFR also constructed from a life table (sum of age-specific death rates) • Not to be confused with life span • The maximum human life span now seems to be in the 120’s. Few people, however, live to be 100
Variation in mortality • Age • Sex • Socioeconomic status
Migration • Movement of people into or out of a specific geographic area • Most variable of the agents of demographic change • Difficult to measure due to lack of reporting and monitoring
Types of migration • In-migration (immigration) • Out-migration (emigration) • International vs. internal
Net migration • Difference between in- and out-migration
Variation in migration • Age • Young adults, life cycle changes • Gender • In Africa males migrate, in much of Asia and Latin America females migrate • Education • Extremes—both very poor and very wealthy migrate • Socioeconomic status • Depends on the type of job
International migrants • Major destinations for immigrants • US, Australia, Canada, European Community, Israel • Often motivated by economic hardship, war, political instability • Chain migration • Choice of destination determined by presence of social or kin network
Variation in international migration • Age • Young adults • Gender • Same as for internal migration • Education • Educated, often professionals • Socioeconomic status • Higher than those who stay behind
Population size and growth • Rate of natural increase • Crude birth rate minus crude death rate • In USA (1997) this was 14.6-8.6=6.0 (0.6%) • Worldwide this was 23.1-9.0=14.0 (1.4%) • Growth rate • Rate of natural increase+net migration • A growth rate of 1% means a population will double in 70 years
At present growth rates • World’s population will double in 50 years • If the growth rate doubles to 2.8%, the world’s population will double in 25 years • Conversely if the growth rate decreases by half to 0.7%, the doubling would occur in 100 years
Demographic balancing equation • Shows the roles of fertility, mortality, and migration in population change • Population =Births–deaths +immigrants-emigrants • Used in population projection
Population projection • Demographers can project population based on current rates of fertility, mortality, and migration • Also can use estimated future rates • Projections lose accuracy quickly as the projected time increases since it is difficult to know how demographic characters will be affected by variables in the future • US hit 300,000,000 on Tuesday at ~7:30am
Population composition • The aggregation of individual demographic characteristics on a population level • Population pyramids • Age sex composition • Four shapes: • Pyramidal—high growth • Rectangular—slow growth • Oval—decline • Hourglass—AIDS driven decline • US Census International Population Pyramid Projections
Other components • Sex • Race • Ethnicity
Race • Race as a classification has come under great fire • There may be a genetic or biological component to race, but in general it is a subjective classification which varies greatly depending on time and place. • For instance, slaves in the US could have only one-sixteenth African ancestry • Today in the US this subjective classification continues
Race may be useful • It gives us some idea of who might be subject to discrimination • Ethnicity refers to linguistic and/or cultural heritage and should not be confused with race
Population distribution • Worldwide population distribution is shifting to developing countries due to higher fertility • Both in the USA and worldwide, urbanization is a critical influence on population distribution
How many people can the earth support? • Carrying capacity of the earth—around 10 billion (Cohen 1995) • When will the earth reach 10 billion at current rates of growth? • Around 2035
Demographic Transitions • Three types of demographic transitions • Fertility • Mortality • Health (also called Epidemiologic)
Why are demographic transitions important? • The combined effect of demographic transitions results in very low population growth • The age structure of the population becomes older • This has effects on economy, health institutions, educational institutions
Geopolitics • Most international population policy oriented towards slowing population growth has focused on inducing fertility transition • This would lower fertility and slow population growth to some extent • Reversing mortality and health transitions is not ethically or politically viable
Theories of fertility transitions • Classical demographic theory • Economic models • Social models • Evolutionary models
Classical transition theory • Industrialization and modernization led to initial higher fertility due to improved health care and higher quality and more reliable food supply • Because pre-industrial societies had high mortality, higher fertility was necessary for those societies to survive • Fertility could only be expected to fall due to the effects of industrialization: higher survival, individualism, consumerism, mobile urban populations, lessening of familial ties, and decline of fatalism
Classical transition theory cont’d. • Three phases of fertility decline • Inicipient decline--widespread fertility control, heavy industrialization • Transitional growth--low mortality but high fertility, industrializing • High growth potential—high mortality and high fertility, very low industrialization
Economic explanations • Applied principles of microeconomics to children—another normal good • Differ in whether desire for children is established early in life or is based on current conditions • Supply and demand: Children are more in demand where they are less expensive • Economic value of children depends on context of subsistence economy.
Social explanations • Post-modernist interpretation • Ideational change is major motivator of fertility transitions • Uses diffusion theory • Ideas about the number of children to have follow linguistic boundaries and diffuse from elites and centers of power to the hinterlands
Evolutionary perspectives • Humans like other organisms evolved in the context of fitness maximization • Maximizing genetic representation in succeeding generations • Human lifestyles vary widely and may show great divergence from the lifestyle in which human reproductive psychology evolved • We can still understand reproductive behavior in the present as the manifestation of evolved psychological mechanisms
These perspectives differ in two related aspects • Theory of motivation • Are people motivated by the uptake of culturally specific roles or by their self-interest? • Acquisition and utilization of information • Do people pattern their fertility after some cultural norm or is fertility a response to environmental/economic conditions?
Cost/value of children • Biologists (Trivers), demographers (Caldwell), and economists (Becker) have all independently recognized that offsprings’ ability to provision themselves are important factors in determining parental fertility
Agriculture • Cultivation and herd animals • “Domestication” • Occurred worldwide about 12,000 years ago • Mesopotamia • Levant • China • Indus valley • Mesoamerica
Effects of agriculture • Agriculture changes time allocation in relation to subsistence pattern • Affects all age-sex groups • Leads to effects of sedentization • Changes diet composition • Increase in simple carbohydrates such as starch and sugar • Increased use of animal fat • Use of dairy products • Potential serious consequences in micronutrient balance
Epidemiological transition • Increasing health issues related to agriculture and sedentism • Diet led to vitamin/mineral deficiency in some places due to heavy reliance on one staple grain