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Chapter 15
Population and urbanization
Chapter Outline
Demography: The Study of Population Population Growth in Global Context A Brief Glimpse at International Migration Theories Urbanization in Global Perspective Perspectives on Urbanization and the Growth of Cities Problems in Global Cities Urban Problems in the United States Population and Urbanization in the Future
Population
World’s population of 6.2 billion in 2000 is increasing by more than 76 million people per year.
Between 2000 and 2030, almost all of the world’s population growth will be in low-income countries.
By 2015: Population of high income nations will increase by 120 million and population of low-income nations will increase by 1.7 billion.
Changes in Population
Changes occur as a result of three processes: fertility (births) mortality (deaths) migration
Ten Leading Causes of Death in the United States, 1900 and 1997
Cause of Death—1900 Rank Cause of Death—1997
Influenza/pneumonia 1 Heart disease
Tuberculosis 2 Cancer
Stomach/intestinal disease 3 Stroke
Heart disease 4 Chronic lung disease
Cerebral hemorrhage 5 Accidents
Kidney disease 6 Pneumonia and influenza
Accidents 7 Diabetes
Cancer 8 HIV
Diseases in early infancy 9 Suicide
Diphtheria 10 Homicide
Migration
Two types of movement: Immigration is the movement of people into a
geographic area to take up residency. Emigration is the movement of people out of a
geographic area to take up residency elsewhere.
Theories of Population Growth
The Malthusian Perspective The Marxist Perspective The Neo‑Malthusian Perspective Demographic Transition Theory
The Malthusian Perspective
If left unchecked, the population would exceed the available food supply.
Population would increase in a geometric progression (2, 4, 8, 16 . . . ) .
The food supply would increase only by an arithmetic progression (1, 2, 3, 4 . . .).
The Marxist Perspective
Using technology, food can be produced for a growing population.
Overpopulation will lead to the eventual destruction of capitalism.
Workers will become dissatisfied and develop class-consciousness because of shared oppression.
The Neo‑Malthusian Perspective
Overpopulation and rapid population growth result in global environmental problems.
People should be encouraging zero population growth.
Demographic Transition Theory
Stage 1: Preindustrial Societies - little population growth, high birth rates offset by high death rates.
Stage 2: Early Industrialization - significant population growth, birth rates are relatively high, death rates decline.
Demographic Transition Theory
Stage 3: Advanced Industrialization and Urbanization - very little population growth occurs, birth rates and death rates are low.
Stage 4: Postindustrialization - birth rates decline as more women are employed and raising children becomes more costly.
World Population in the Future
World population is increasing 1.8% per year. Since many women are of childbearing age,
replacement fertility results in more births than deaths.
Demographic shifts contribute to a reduction in fertility rates and population growth.
Development of a City
Three preconditions: A favorable physical environment. An advanced technology that could produce a
social surplus. A well-developed political system to provide
social stability to the economic system.
Gender Regimes in Cities
Different cities have different gender regimes: How women and men should think,
feel, and act. How access to positions and control of
resources should be managed. How women and men should relate to each
other.
Simmel's View of City Life
Urban life is stimulating; it shapes people's thoughts and actions.
Many urban residents avoid emotional involvement with each other and try to ignore events taking place around them.
Urban living can be liberating - people have opportunities for individualism and autonomy.
Gans's Urban Villagers
Five categories of urban dwellers:
1. Cosmopolites are students, artists, writers, musicians, and professionals who live in the city to be close to its cultural facilities.
2. Unmarried people and childless couples live in the city to be close to work and entertainment.
Gans's Urban Villagers
3. Ethnic villagers live in ethnically segregated neighborhoods.
4. The deprived are poor people with dim future prospects.
5. The trapped are downwardly mobile persons, older persons, and addicts who cannot escape the city.
Suburbs
Since World War II, the U.S. population has shifted as people moved to the suburbs.
Suburbanites rely on urban centers for employment but pay property taxes to suburban governments and school districts.
Functionalist Perspective on Urbanism: Ecological Models
Concentric zone model
Due to invasion, succession, and gentrification, cities are a series of circular zones, each characterized by a particular land use.
Sector model Cities consist of wedge-shaped sectors, based on terrain and transportation routes, with the most expensive areas occupying the best terrain.
Multiple nuclei model
Cities have more than one center of development, based on specific needs and activities.
Conflict Perspective on Urbanism: Political Economy Models
Capitalism and urban
growth
The capitalist class chooses locations for skyscrapers and housing projects, limiting individual choices by others.
Gender regimes in
cities
Different cities have different ideologies regarding access to social positions and resources for men and women.
Global patterns of
growth
Capital investment decisions by core nations result in uneven growth in peripheral and semiperipheral nations.
Symbolic Interactionist Perspective on Urbanism
Simmel’s view of city life
The intensity of city life causes people to become insensitive to individuals and events around them.
Urbanism as a way of life
Size, density, and heterogeneity of urban population result in elaborate division of labor and space.
Gans’s urban villagers
5 categories of adaptation occur among urbanites, ranging from cosmopolites to trapped city dwellers.
Gender and city life
Cities offer women a paradox: more freedom than more isolated areas, yet greater potential danger.
Population and Urbanizationin the Future: Latin America
Latin America is becoming the most urban low-income region:
Four megacities - Mexico City (18 million), Buenos Aires (12 million), Lima (7 million), and Santiago (5 million) - contain more than half the region’s population.
By 2010, Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo are expected to have a combined population of 40 million.