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Title: Chapter%206:%20The%20Human%20Population%20and%20Its%20Impact


1
Chapter 6 The Human Population and Its Impact

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Human Population Growth Continues but Is Unevenly
Distributed
  • In the past 200 years the human population has
    been growing exponentially (J-curve).
  • Three major factors of population growth
  • 1)ability of humans to expand into all of earths
    climate zones and habitats
  • 2)emergence of modern agriculture allows us to
    produce more food
  • 3)improvements in sanitation health care and
    the development of antibiotics vaccines have
    resulted in a drop of death rates

3
Core Case StudySlowing Population Growth In
China A Success Story
  • China is the worlds most populated country
    with1.3 billion people
  • Expected to reach1.5 billion by 2025 and decline
    to 1.4 billion by 2050.
  • Goal has been to sharply reduce the population
    using the One Child Policy those who follow the
    policy receive benefits such as better housing ,
    more food , and free health care
  • Between 1972 and 2010, birth rates declined,
    trimming average number of children born to
    Chinas women from 5.7 to 1.5

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Core Case StudySlowing Population Growth In
China A Success Story
  • China has undergone rapid industrialization- 100
    million new people have created a middle class
  • We should care about Chinas population because
  • We all depend on Earths life support systems to
    meet our basic needs for air, water, food,
    land, shelter, and energy.
  • Our current world population is not meeting the
    basic needs of 1.4 billion people.

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Slowing Population Growth in China A Success
Story
  • China is the worlds most populous country, with
    1.3 billion people.
  • In 1960, in order to avoid a serious threat of
    mass starvation due to a rapidly growing
    population, government officials established the
    worlds most extensive, intrusive, and strict
    family planning and birth control program.
  • Their goal in this has been to sharply reduce
    population growth.

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6-1 How Many People Can The Earth
Support?Human Population Growth Continues but
is Unevenly Distributed
  • Due to advances in technology, medicine, and
    modern agriculture, population has increased
    exponentially.
  • Rate of population growth has slowed but the
    worlds population is still increasing
    exponentially at a rate of 1.21 a year.
  • 83 million new people added in 2010 1 added to
    MDCs.
  • Projected to be 7.8-10.8 by 2050.

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6-1 How Many People Can The Earth Support?
Human Population Growth Continues but is Unevenly
Distributed
  • Cultural Carrying Capacity is the maximum number
    of people that can live in a reasonable freedom
    and comfort indefinitely without decreasing the
    ability of the earth to sustain future
    generations.

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6-2 What Factors Influence the Size of the Human
Population? The Human Population Can Grow
,Decline, or Remain Fairly Stable
  • If there are more births than deaths during a
    given period of time, population increases. If
    reverse is true, then it decreases.
  • Crude birth rate is the number of live births
    per1,000 people in a population in a given year.
  • Crude death rate is the number of live deaths
    per1,000 people in a population in a given year.
  • Population change (Births Immigration) -
    (Deaths Emigration)

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6-2 What Factors Influence the Size of the
Human Population? Women Are Having Fewer Babies
but Not Few Enough to Stabilize the Worlds
Population
  • Fertility rate is the number of children born to
    a woman during her lifetime.
  • Replacement level fertility rate is the average
    number of children that couples in a population
    must bear to replace themselves (2.1 in more
    developed countries and 2.5 in less developed
    countries).
  • Total fertility rate is the average number of
    children born to women in a population during
    their reproductive years.

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6-2 What Factors Influence the Size of the Human
Population? Several Factors Affect Birth Rates
and Fertility Rates
  • Factors affecting birth rates and fertility rates
    include
  • Importance of children as part of the labor force
  • Cost of raising and educating children.
  • Availability of , or lack of, private and public
    pension systems
  • Urbanization
  • Educational and employment opportunities
    available for women
  • Average age of marriage
  • Availability of legal abortions/ birth control.

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6-2 What Factors Influence the Size of the Human
Population? Several Factors Affect Death Rates
  • Rapid growth of the worlds population over the
    past 100 years is not primarily due to higher
    birth rates but instead lower death rates.
  • Life expectancy is the average number of years a
    newborn infant can be expected to live.
  • Infant Mortality Rate is the number of infants
    out of every 1000 born who die before their first
    birthday.
  • Infant mortality rates have declined dramatically
    since 1965.

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6-2 What Factors Influence the Size of the Human
Population? Several Factors Affect Death Rates
  • Child mortality rates are the annual number of
    deaths among children under 5 per 1000 live
    births.
  • The USA has the worlds highest teenage pregnancy
    rate.
  • Child mortality varies greatly from region to
    region.
  • According to the United Nations, the worlds
    child mortality rate dropped 20 between 1960s
    and 2008.

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6-2 What Factors Influence the Size of the Human
Population? Migration Affects an Areas
Population Size
  • Migration is the movement of people into
    (immigration) and out of (emigration) specific
    geographic areas.
  • Most people migrating from one area or country to
    another seek jobs and economic improvement .
  • Religious persecution, ethnic conflicts,
    political oppression, wars, environmental
    degradation are also reasons people migrate.

22
Migration Affects an Areas Population
  • Migration the movement of people into and out of
    specific geographic areas.
  • Most people migrate seeking jobs and economic
    improvement.
  • Religious persecution, ethnic conflicts,
    political oppression, wars, and certain types of
    environmental degradation also drive people to
    migrate.

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6-3 How Does a Populations Age Structure Affect
Its Growth or Decline?A Populations Age
Structure Helps Us to Make Projections
  • Age Structure is the number or percentages of
    males and females in the young middle, and
    older age groups in that population.
  • The population age structure diagram is
    constructed by plotting a given populations
    percentages of males and females in each of three
    age categories pre-reproductive (0-14),
    reproductive(15-44), and post-reproductive(45).

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6-3 How Does a Populations Age Structure Affect
Its Growth or Decline?A Populations Age
Structure Helps Us to Make Projections
  • A country with a large percentage of its people
    younger than 15 will experience a rapid
    population growth.
  • Demographic momentum is the number of births that
    will rise for several decades even if women have
    an average of just 1-2 children, due to a large
    number of girls entering their prime reproductive
    years.

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6-3 How Does a Populations Age Structure Affect
Its Growth or Decline? Populations Made Up of
Mostly Older People Can Decline Rapidly
  • Japan has the highest percentage of elderly
    people. With a population of 127 million in
    2010, it is projected to shrink to 95 million by
    2050.
  • Chinas One Child Policy means less children by
    2020- 31 of population 60 years old.

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6-3 How Does a Populations Age Structure Affect
Its Growth or Decline? Populations Made Up of
Mostly Older People Can Decline Rapidly
  • Having a graying population leads to a declining
    work force, limited funds for supporting
    continued economic development, and fewer
    children and grandchildren to take care of the
    growing number of elderly people.
  • Economic and social problems result from the
    rapid population decline - this can threaten
    population growth and create labor shortages.

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6-3 How Does a Populations Age Structure Affect
Its Growth or Decline? Populations Can Decline
Due to a Rising Death Rate The AIDS Tragedy
  • Between 1981 and 2009, AIDS killed more than 27
    million people and takes about 2 million more
    lives each year.
  • AIDS kills many young adults ands leaves many
    children orphaned .
  • Results in drop in average age expectancy, loss
    of productive young adult workers and trained
    personnel, and drastic change to a country's age
    structure.
  • Experts call for the international community to
    create and fund a massive program to help
    countries ravaged by AIDS. The program would
    reduce the spread of HIV by providing financial
    assistance for improving education and health
    care and providing social workers to try to
    compensate for the missing young-adult
    generation.

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6-4 How Can We Slow Human Population Growth?The
First Step Is to Promote Economic Development
  • The Demographic Transition states that as
    countries become industrialized and economically
    developed, first their death rates decline and
    then their birth rates decline. It takes place in
    4 stages.
  • The three most important steps 1) Reduce
    poverty primarily through economic
    development and universal primary education 2)
    Elevate the status of women 3) Encourage family
    planning and reproductive health care

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6-4 How Can We Slow Human Population Growth?The
First Step Is to Promote Economic Development
  • Some analysts believe that most lesser developed
    countries will make a demographic transition over
    the next few decades
  • Other analysts fear that rapid population growth,
    extreme poverty, and increasing environmental
    degradation in some low income, lesser developed
    countries will leave them stuck in stage two.

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6-4 How Can We Slow Human Population
Growth?Empowering Women Helps to Slow
Population Growth
  • Women tend to have fewer children if they are
    educated, have the ability to control their own
    fertility, earn an income of their own, and live
    in societies that do not suppress their rights.
  • Although women make up roughly half the worlds
    population, in most societies they have fewer
    rights, education, and economic opportunities
    than men.

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6-4 How Can We Slow Human Population Growth?The
First Step Is to Promote Economic Development
  • Globally, women account for 2/3 of all work done
    but receive only 10 of the worlds income.
  • Women own less than 2 of the worlds land
  • Women make up more than 70 of the worlds poor
    and 64 of its 800 million illiterate adults

40
6-4 How Can We Slow Human Population
Growth?Promote Family Planning
  • Family planning provides educational and clinical
    services that help couples choose how many
    children to have and when to have them
  • Family planning has been a major factor in
    reducing the number of births throughout most of
    the world, the number of abortions performed each
    year, and the number of mothers and fetuses
    dying during pregnancy.
  • Responsible for a drop of 55 in total fertility
    rates in lesser developed countries.

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6-4 How Can We Slow Human Population
Growth?Promote Family Planning
  • Family planning also has financial benefits
    studies show that each dollar spent on family
    planning saves 10-16 in health, education, and
    social service costs.
  • The United Nations Population Fund reports that
    42 of pregnancies in lesser developed countries
    are unplanned and 26 end with abortion

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Case Study The U.S Population is Growing Rapidly
  • The period of high birth rates between 1946 and
    1964 is known as the baby boom. During the baby
    boom 79 million people were added to the US
    population.
  • The drop of the total fertility rate has slowed
    the rate of population growth in the US , but the
    population is still growing faster than China's
    population.
  • The leading causes of deaths in the US in 1907
    were pneumonia, tuberculosis and diarrhea .

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Case Study The United States A Nation of
Immigrants
  • Currently, legal and illegal immigration
    accounts for about 36 of the countrys annual
    population growth.
  • Latin Americans make up 53 of our immigrants,
    Asians makes up 25, and Europeans makes up 14
  • There are many debates of whether to reduce legal
    immigration in the US.
  • 60 of the American public supports reducing
    legal immigration.

46
Case Study The United States A Nation of
Immigrants
  • Some argue that it would diminish the United
    states historical role of the land of opportunity
    to limit immigration, taking away from the
    worlds cultural diversity.
  • Immigrants open up businesses and they help the
    US succeed in the global economy.
  • Many immigrants take menial and low paying jobs
    that Americans shun.

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Case Study The American Baby Boom
  • The baby boom added 79 million more people to the
    US population.
  • Baby boomers created the youth market in their
    teens and twenties.
  • Due to the downturn in the economy in 2007, many
    of these baby boomers lost their jobs and much of
    their savings.
  • In 1960, 111 Americans were 65. This number
    will grow sharply through 2030. This is called
    the graying of America.

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Case Study Slowing Population Growth in India
  • In 1952, India added 5 million people to its
    population. In 2010, it added 18 million.
  • 32 of Indias population is under the age of 15.
  • India has the worlds largest economy and is
    thriving, but it faces serious poverty and
    malnutrition.

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Case Study Slowing Population Growth in India
  • Indian women have an average of 2.6 children.
  • They believe that they need more children to work
    and care for them in old age.
  • Like China, India has many critical environmental
    problems.
  • They only have 2.3 of the worlds land resources
    and 2 of its forests
  • More than 2/3 of its water is seriously polluted
    and they also have serious air pollution.

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Science Focus Projecting Population Change
  • There are countless factors that demographers
    have to consider when making population
    projections
  • They have to determine the reliability of current
    population estimates, estimate trends in
    fertility, and consider that different
    organizations use different sets of data and
    differing methods to make projections.
  • All these factors make for a variation of
    projections

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Science Focus How Long Can the Human Population
Keep Growing?
  • Human activities have directly affected 83 of
    the earths land surface, excluding Antarctica.
  • Thomas Malthus hypothesized that the human
    population tends to increase exponentially while
    food supplies tend to increase more slowly at a
    linear rate. However, because of technological
    advances in food production, food has also
    increased exponentially.

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Science Focus How Long Can the Human Population
Keep Growing?
  • Overconsumption and overpopulation are considered
    the key problems
  • At todays level of consumption, scientists
    estimate that we would need the equivalent of 1.3
    planet Earths to sustain our per capita use of
    renewable resources indefinitely.
  • By 2050, with the projected population increase,
    we will likely need almost 2 planet Earths to
    meet such resource needs and 5 Earths if everyone
    reaches the current U.S level of renewable
    resource consumption per person

57
Science Focus How Long Can the Human Population
Keep Growing?
  • Some analysts believe that because of our
    technological ingenuity, there are few, if any,
    limits to human population growth and resource
    use per person
  • Most agree that we have used technology to alter
    natural systems to meet our growing needs and
    wants

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