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Population, Urbanization, and Environment

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Population, Urbanization, and Environment Demography: the Study of Population Fertility- the incident of childbearing in a country s population. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Population, Urbanization, and Environment


1
Population, Urbanization, and Environment
2
Demography the Study of Population
  • Fertility- the incident of childbearing in a
    countrys population.
  • Fecundity- or maximum possible childbearing is
    sharply reduced by cultural norms, finances and
    personal choice.
  • Mortality- Mortality the incidence of death in a
    countrys population.
  • crude death rate- the number of deaths in a given
    year for every thousand people in a population.

3
  • infant mortality rate- the number of deaths among
    infants under one year of age for every thousand
    births in a given year.
  • life expectancy- the average life span of a
    countrys population.
  • Migration- the movement of people into and out of
    a specific territory.
  • Population Growth- Fertility, mortality, and
    migration all affect the size of a societys
    population.

4
Health and Theory of Population
  • A Major demographic shift began about 1750 as the
    worlds population turned upward, reaching the 1
    billion mark by 1800. This milestone was
    repeated by 1930barely a century laterwhen a
    second billion people were added to the planet.
    Global population reached 3 billion by 1962 and 4
    billion by 1974. The rate of world population
    has increase has slowed recently, but our planet
    passed the 5 billion mark in 1987 and the 6
    billion mark in late 1999.

5
Malthusian Theory
  • Malthus main argument was that our world was
    heading towards social chaos. Because population
    would tend to increase in geometric progression
    (2, 4, 8, 16, 32), whereas food production would
    increase in arithmetic progression (2, 3, 4, 5,
    6) because farmland is limited.
  • Malthus offers an important lesson. Habitable
    land, clean water, and fresh air are limited
    resources, and presently, greater economic
    productivity has taken a heavy toll on the
    natural environment. People everywhere should
    become aware of the dangers of population
    increase.

6
Demographic Transition Theory
  • Demographic transition theory- the thesis that
    population patterns reflect a societys level of
    technological development.
  • Stage 1- have high birth rates because of the
    economic value of children and the absence of
    birth control.
  • Stage 2- the onset of industrialization-brings a
    demographic transition as death rates fall
    because of greater food supplies and scientific
    medicine.
  • Stage 3- a mature industrial economythe birth
    rate drops, curbing population growth.
  • Stage 4- a post-industrial economythe
    demographic transition is complete.

7
The Evolution of Cities
  • Only about 12,000 years ago did our ancestors
    begin founding permanent settlements, launching
    the first urban revolution.

8
The First Cities
  • Before humans could build permanent settlements,
    they had to discover how to domesticate animals
    and cultivate crops.
  • The emergence of cities, then, led to
    specialization and higher living standards.

9
Preindustrial European cities
  • Medieval cities ere very different from todays
    cities. Beneath towering cathedrals, the narrow
    and winding streets of London, Brussels, and
    Florence teemed with merchants, artisans,
    priests, peddlers, jugglers, nobles, and servants.

10
Industrial European Cities
  • As the Middle Ages came to a close, steadily
    increasing commerce enriched a new urban middle
    class or bourgeoisie. With more and more money,
    the Bourgeoisie soon rivaled the heredity
    nobility.
  • By 1750, the Industrial Revolution triggered a
    second urban revolution.

11
The Growth of U.S. Cities
  • metropolis- a large city that socially and
    economically dominates an urban area.
  • suburbs- urban areas beyond the political
    boundaries of a city.

12
Post industrial Sunbelt Cities
  • About 1950, cities began to decentralize with the
    growth of suburbs and edge cities.

13
Megalopolis Regional Cities
  • megalopolis- a vast urban region containing a
    number of cities and their surrounding suburbs.

14
Ferdinand Tonnies Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft
  • Gemeinschaft-a type of social organization by
    which people are closely tied by kinship and
    tradition. (loosely meaning community)
  • The Gemeinschaft of the rural village joins
    people in what amounts to a single primary group.
  • Tonnies argued that Gemienshaft is absent in the
    modern city. On the contrary urbanization
    fosters Gesellschaft.
  • Tonnies saw urbanization as the erosion of close,
    enduring social relations in favor of the
    fleeting and impersonal ties typical of business.

15
Emil Durkheim Mechanical and Organic Solidarity
  • Emil Durkheim agreed with much of Tonniess
    thinking. But Durkheim countered, urbanites do
    not lack social bonds they simply organize
    social life differently than rural people.
  • Mechanical solidarity- social bonds based on
    common sentiments and shared moral values. This
    concept emphasizes tradition and is very close to
    Gemeinschaft.

16
  • Organic solidarity- social bonds based on
    specialization and inter social bonds based on
    specialization and interdependence. This concept
    which parellels Tonniess Gesellschaft reveals an
    important difference between the two thinkers.
    Both thought the growth of industrial cities
    undermined tradition, but Durkheim optimistically
    pointed to a new kind of solidarity.
  • Where societies had been built on likeness,
    Durkheim now saw social life based on difference.

17
Environment and Society
  • Ecology- the study of the interaction of living
    organisms and the natural environment.
  • The Natural Environment- the Earths surface and
    atmosphere, including living organisms, air,
    water, soil, and other resources necessary to
    sustain life.

18
The Global Dimension
  • The study of the natural environment must take a
    global perspective. The reason is simple
    Regardless of political divisions between
    nations, the planet is a single ecosystem.
  • Ecosystem- a system composed of the interaction
    of all living organisms and their natural
    environment.

19
Technology
  • As humans have developed more powerful
    technology, we have increasingly remade the world
    as we choose.
  • Human control of the natural environment grew
    dramatically with the Industrial Revolution.
    Muscle power gave way to engines that burn fossil
    fuels, coal at first then oil. Such machinery
    affects the environment in two ways by consuming
    natural resources and by releasing pollutants
    into the atmosphere. Humans also tunnel through
    mountains, dam rivers, irrigate deserts, and
    drill for oil in the bottom of the ocean.

20
  • Higher living standards increase the problem of
    solid waste and pollution.
  • Environmental deficit- profound and long-term
    harm to the natural environment caused by
    humanitys focus on short-term material
    affluence.
  • First it reminds us that the state of the
    environment is a social issue, reflecting choices
    people make about how to live.
  • Second, it suggests that much environmental
    damage to the air, land, and wateris
    unintended.
  • Third, in some respects, the environment deficit
    is reversible. Inasmuch as societies have
    created environmental problems, in other words,
    societies can undo many of them.

21
Culture Growth and Limits
  • Whether we recognize environmental dangers and
    decide to do something about them is a cultural
    matter. Thus along with technology, culture has
    powerful environmental consequences.

22
The Logic of Growth
  • Our nation sets aside specific areas such as
    parks and game reserves. This act indicates
    that except for specific areas, people can freely
    use natural resources for their own purposes.
  • Material comfort the belief that money and the
    things it buys enrich our lives.

23
The Limits of Growth
  • The limits to Growth is that humanity must
    implement policies to control the growth of the
    population, production and use of resources to
    avoid environmental collapse.
  • According to the limits of growth thesis, we are
    quickly consuming the Earths finite resources.
  • Limits of growth theorists are also known as
    neo-Malthusian because they share Malthuss
    pessimism about the future.

24
Solid Waste The Disposable Society
  • The U.S. has become a disposable society. We
    consume more products than virtually any other
    nation, and many of these products have throw
    away packaging.
  • Problems
  • 1. Landfills across the country are filling up.
  • 2. Material in landfills can pollute
    groundwater.
  • 3. What goes into landfills often stays there,
    sometimes for centuries.

25
Water and Air
  • Through the hydrologic cycle, the Earth naturally
    recycles water and refreshes the land.

26
Water Supply
  • Some regions of the world especially the tropics,
    enjoy a plentiful supply of water. But high
    demand coupled with modest reserves, makes water
    supply a matter of concern in much of North
    America and Asia, where people look to rivers
    than rainfall for their water.
  • Egyptians must make do with one-sixth the amount
    of water per person from the Nile compared to
    1900.

27
Water Pollution
  • In large citiesfrom Mexico City to Cairo to
    Shanghaimany people have no choice but to drink
    contaminated water. Infectious diseases such as
    typhoid, cholera, and dysenteryall caused by
    water borne microorganismsspread rapidly.
    Besides ensuring ample supplies of water, then we
    must protect the quality of water.
  • Acid rain- made acidic by air pollution that
    destroys plant and animal life.

28
Air Pollution
  • Because we are surrounded by air, most people in
    the United States are more aware of air pollution
    than contaminated water. One of the unexpected
    consequences of industrial technology, especially
    the factory and the motor vehicle, has been a
    decline in air quality.

29
The Rain Forests
  • Rain Forests are regions of dense forestation,
    most of which circle the globe close to the
    equator.

30
Global Warming
  • The rain forests cleanse the atmosphere of carbon
    dioxide.
  • Much of this Carbon Dioxide is absorbed by
    oceans. But plants take in Carbon Dioxide and
    expel oxygen. This is why rain forests are vital
    to maintaining the chemical balance of the
    atmosphere.
  • The problem then, is that carbon dioxide
    production is rising while the amount of plant
    life on the Earth is shrinking.
  • Global Warming, a rise in the Earths average
    temperature caused by an increasing concentration
    of carbon dioxide and other gasses in the
    atmosphere.

31
Declining Biodiversity
  • On Earth there are as many as 30 million species
    of animals, plants and microorganisms. Several
    dozen unique species of plants and animals cease
    to exist each day, but given the vast number of
    living species, why should we be concerned?
  • First, our planets biodiversity provides a
    varied source of human food.
  • Biodiversity is needed to feed our planets
    rapidly increasing population.
  • Second, the Earths biodiversity is a vital
    genetic resource. Medical and pharmaceutical
    researchers look to animals and plant
    biodiversity for new compounds to cure disease
    and improve our lives.

32
  • Third, with the loss of any species of
    lifewhether it is the magnificent California
    condor, the famed Chinese panda, the spotted owl,
    or even one variety of antthe beauty and
    complexity of our natural environment are
    diminished.
  • Finally unlike pollution, the extinct of any
    species is irreversible and final. An important
    ethical question then is whether we who live
    today have the right to impoverish the world for
    those who live in it tomorrow.

33
  • ecologically sustainable culture-a way of life
    that meets the needs of the present generation
    without threatening the environmental legacy of
    future generations.

34
  • First- the world needs to bring population growth
    under control. The current population of more
    than 6 billion is already straining the natural
    environment
  • Second-the Earths biodiversity is a vital
    genetic resource. Medical and pharmaceutical
    researchers look to animals and plant
    biodiversity for new compounds to cure disease
    and improve our lives.

35
  • Third, with the loss of any species of
    lifewhether it is the magnificent California
    condor, the famed Chinese panda, the spotted owl,
    or even one variety of antthe beauty and
    complexity of our natural environment are
    diminished.
  • Finally, the extinct of any species is
    irreversible and final. An important ethical
    question then is whether we who live today have
    the right to impoverish the world for those who
    live in it tomorrow.
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