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CHAPTER 2
POPULATION
WHY IS POPULATION IMPORTANT?
1. Helps explain issues in human geography
2. It’s connected to everything!!!! (economics, health, politics….)
CASE STUDY: INDIA
• Read the case study on p. 46 and answer the following:
1. Give 2 reasons people in India are having many children
2. Where do most people in India live?
3. How does the age of India’s population negatively affect it’s growing wealth?
ISSUE #1
Where is the World’s Population Distributed?
Geographers look at two properties to understand global population distribution….
CONCENTRATION(which areas are clustered, which are
sparse? )
DENSITY
2/3 of the world’s population lives in East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Western Europe
Different ways of measuring this: Arithmetic, Physiological, Agricultural
World Population Cartogram
Fig. 2-1: This cartogram displays countries by the size of their population rather than their land area. (Only countries with 50 million or more people are named.)
worldmapperWorld Growth
ARITHMETIC
• Total number of people divided by total land area (population density)
• Helps geographers compare populations of different parts of the world (helps understand “where”, people live, but not “why” there is uneven distribution
PHYSIOLOGICAL
• Number of people supported by a unit area of arable land
• Helps us understand the capacity of land to support the population
• The higher the PD, the more pressure on the land to produce enough food
AGRICULTURAL
• Ratio of the number of farmers to the amount of arable land
•Helps explain economic differences
• MDCs have lower AD (why? Benefits?)
LIST 3 PHYSICAL SIMILARITIES THE MOST POPULATED REGIONS SHARE…
LIST 3 PHYSICAL SIMILARITIES THE MOST POPULATED REGIONS SHARE…
1. Live near ocean and/or river w/ easy access to a river
2. Live in low-lying areas
3. Fertile soil
4. Temperate climate
5. All in the NH, between 10*N and 55*N
- exception?
ISSUE #2
Where has the World’s Population Increased?
IMPORTANT MEASUREMENTS
Crude Birth Rate Crude Death Rate
Natural Increase Rate
MEASURING NIR
• just subtract CDR from CBR
ex. CBR = 20 (20 per 1,000) CDR = 5 (5 per 1,000)
- therefore the NIR = 15 or 1.5 % (remember, it’s out of 1,000, not 100)
--- know the global trend over the past 60 years (p.53)
TRUE/FALSE?
• As NIR decreases, the overall population automatically decreases as well.
TRUE/FALSE?
• As NIR decreases, the overall population automatically decreases as well.
FALSE – see graph on p.52
WHERE IS NIR INCREASING?
• Almost all growth in NIR is clustered in LDCs
• It is negative in Europe
* What are the implications of this?
Provide and example/explanation of how a country’s NIR could equal
1.6%.
(CBR is 100 and CDR is 84)
True/False – the NIR peaked in the 1960s and then decreased during
the late 20th century.
(True)
True/False – As the NIR decreased the overall population must also
decrease.
(False)
True/False – The nations with the highest NIR tend to also be the
same as those with high CBRs and TFRs.
(True)
If a nation has a very high life expectancy would you expect it to
most likely have a high or low infant mortality rate?
(low)
In general, the IMR reflects a nation’s ___________________
(health care system)
True/False – the combined CDR for LDCs is actually lower than that of
MDCs.
(True)
Which of the following has the highest CBR?
a. sub-Saharan Africab. Europec. East Asia
(sub-Saharan Africa)
Which of the following has the lowest CDR?
a. sub-Saharan Africab. Europec. South America
(South America)
Which of the following has the highest NIR?
a. sub-Saharan Africab. North Americac. South Asia
(sub-Saharan Africa)
Which of the following has the highest TFR?
a. Middle Eastb. Europec. North America
(Middle East)
Which of the following has the lowest IMR?
a. North Americab. Southeast Asiac. South America
(North America)
ISSUE #3
Why is Population Increasing at Different Rates in Different Countries?
List what you think are the 10 most populated countries in the world
1. China 2. India 3. U.S. 4. Indonesia 5. Brazil 6. Pakistan 7. Bangladesh 8. Nigeria 9. Russia10. Japan
List what you think will be the 10 most populated countries in the world in
the year 2050
1. India2. China3. U.S.4. Pakistan5. Nigeria6. Indonesia 7. Bangladesh8. Brazil9. Ethiopia10. Democratic Republic of the Congo
WORLD POPULATION
2010• 1. China • 2. India • 3. U.S. • 4. Indonesia • 5. Brazil • 6. Pakistan • 7. Bangladesh • 8. Nigeria • 9. Russia • 10. Japan
2050• 1. India• 2. China• 3. U.S.• 4. Pakistan• 5. Nigeria• 6. Indonesia • 7. Bangladesh• 8. Brazil• 9. Ethiopia• 10. Democratic Republic of the
Congo
PDS
World Population Growth1950 - 2005
Fig. 2-6: Total world population increased from 2.5 to over 6 billion in slightly over 50 years. The natural increase rate peaked in the early 1960s and has declined since, but the number of people added each year did not peak until 1990.
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
• A process of change in a society’s population
• This transition will vary in different places, at different times
• Process has different stages, every country is either 2,3, or 4
STAGE 1: LOW GROWTH
• Characterizes most of humanity throughout Earth’s history
• NIR = 0 (roughly); high CBR and CDR
• Agricultural revolution led to population increase (8000 BC)
but unreliable food supply kept societies in stage 1 until mid-1700s
STAGE 2: HIGH GROWTH• After 1750 world population grew
MUCH faster
• CDR plummets and CBR remains about the same (NIR goes way up because the gap between CDR and CBR is high)
• industrial revolution (mid-1700s) spurred this change and pushed some countries into stage 2
• Countries in Europe and NA entered S2 in about 1800, many in Asia and Africa didn’t get there until 1950 (why? – medical revolution)
STAGE 3: MODERATE GROWTH• CBR drops sharply and CDR falls, but
at a much slower rate than in S2 (NIR increases but only moderately because the gap between CBR and CDR narrows)
• European and NA countries entered S3 in the first half of the 20th century
• Most Asian and LA countries moved there recently, most African countries are still in S2
• People choose to have fewer children (social behavior changes)
• ---read p.59
STAGE 4: LOW GROWTH
• CBR declines until it equals CDR (NIR = 0)
• Also called zero population growth (TFR results in a lack of change in total population)
• Most European countries are here
• Social changes explain the change from S3 to S4 (p.60)
The Demographic Transition
Fig. 2-13: The demographic transition consists of four stages, which move from high birth and death rates, to declines first in death rates then in birth rates, and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates. Population growth is most rapid in the second stage.
TYPE 2
• List the factors that push a society from stage 1 to stage 2, stage 2 to stage 3, and stage 3 to stage 4.
TYPE 2• List the factors that push a society from stage 1 to stage 2, stage
2 to stage 3, and stage 3 to stage 4.
a. Industrial rev. and medical rev. - push from 1 to 2
b. People decide to have fewer children – push from 2 to 3 (lower IMR, economic changes such as not working on farms and smaller living spaces in urban settings)
c. People have even fewer children due to things such as ,more women in the workforce, more leisure, time, more use on birth control … - push from 3 to 4
Which stage am I?
1. CBR and CDR are about the same, have good technology, food supply and health care
2. Most of human history has been in my stage
3. CBR stays relatively the same as it was in the previous stage, but CDR plummets
4. NIR increases, but moderately, as gap between CDR and CBR narrows
Which stage am I?
1. CBR and CDR are about the same, have good technology, food supply and health care ; zero population growth(Stage 4)
2. Most of human history has been in my stage(Stage 1)
3. CBR stays relatively the same as it was in the previous stage, but CDR plummets
(Stage 2)
3. NIR increases, but moderately, as gap between CDR and CBR narrows; CBR drops sharply
(Stage 3)
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION AND
POPULATION PYRAMIDS
• make sure you know dependency ratio, sex ratio and the examples of countries in each stage and what their pyramid looks like
• as a nation moves through the stages the % of elderly people increases (explains why nations in stages 3 and 4, which are MDCs, have higher CDRs than LDCs)
WHAT DOES A PYRAMID TELL US?
• Read p.62 and look at examples on p.63
Pay attention to me, I have lots to tell you about my community!
STAGE 2-High Growth: CAPE VERDE (p.64)
STAGE 3-Moderat Growth: CHILE (p.65)
STAGE 4-Low Growth: DENMARK (p.66)
POPULATION PYRAMIDS
• With a partner draw a pyramid representing each state (2,3,4) – no pyramid for stage 1
• Add a brief description explaining why the pyramid represents that particular stage
• Draw 2 pyramids, not labeled, that your classmates will have to identify ( I will tell you which stage to draw)
ISSUE #4
Why Might the World Face an Overpopulation Problem?
MALTHUS(population growth is outrunning food supply)
Neo-Malthusians
• Believe it is worse than Malthus anticipated:
1. more countries have entered stage 2 so gap between population and resources is greater than he anticipated (especially inLDCs)
2. not just food is being outstripped, world population is too much for other resources as well (clean air, arable land,fuel)
Critics of Malthus• Food supply is not fixed, it can
be expanded (possibilism)
• Larger population can actually stimulate economic growth, leading to more production of food and technologies
• Marxists don’t blame pop. growth, they blame inequalities of capitalism
What Malthus had Wrong
• Since 1950 world food supply has grown faster than global NIR (new techniques, better seeds, use of more land, Green Revolution)
• Expected world pop. to be 10 billion by 2000, actually 6 billion
• During past ¼ century population has been increasing at a much slower rate than previous ½ cent.
• However, this still adds to our population (why?) – so he wasn’t completely wrong
Now it is believed that our population will hit 7 billion by the
end of 2011
Food & Population, 1950-2000Malthus vs.
Actual Trends
Fig. 2-20: Malthus predicted population would grow faster than food production, but food production actually expanded faster than population in the 2nd half of the 20th century.
DECLINING BIRTH RATES• 2 reasons NIR can
decline:
1. Lower birth rates
2. Higher death rates
*** for obvious reasons most people develop policies to promote #1
NIR
2 STRATEGIES THAT HAVE REDUCED BIRTH RATES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT DISTRIBUTION OF CONTRACEPTIVES
1. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
More educationMore/better health care
Lower IMR = having fewer children
2. DISTRIBUTION OF CONTRACEPTIVES
• Demand for contraceptives in LDCs is higher than supply (need to be distributed quickly and cheaply)
• Contraceptive use is especially low in Africa (25% compared to 75% in LA and 66% in Asia)– Reasons are economic, religious, and
educational/cultural
• For women in some LDCs having more children is a way to “improve” their social status
Women Using Family Planning
Promoting One-Child Policy in China
WORLD HEALTH THREATS
• In most countries lower CBRs have been responsible for declining NIRs, but in some regions(especially sub-Saharan Africa) lower NIRs have resulted from higher CDRs
• Epidemiologic transition focuses on causes of death in each stage of demographic transition
STAGES 1
• Stage of pestilence and famine
• Infectious and parasitic diseases are main causes of deaths (animal and human attacks too)
BLACK PLAGUE
STAGE 2
• Stage of receding pandemics
• Improvements of IR reduced spread of infectious diseases
• Poor people in crowded areas had high death rates
• 1832 – ½ million die in New York from cholera
• 1831 – 1/8 of Cairo’s population dies of cholera
Cholera in London,
1854
Fig. 2-23: By mapping the distribution of cholera cases and water pumps in Soho, London, Dr. John Snow identified the source of the water-borne epidemic.
STAGE 3
• Stage of degenerative and human-generated diseases
• Decrease in deaths from infectious disease
• Increase in chronic disorders associated with aging (exs. Cancer and heart attacks)
ATTACK
STAGE 4
• Stage of delayed degenerative disease
• Same causes of death as in stage 3, but medical advances allow people to live longer
• Better diets, new types of surgery, less smoking….
Retired Man in Russia
STAGE 5???
What is it?• Reemergence of infectious
and parasitic diseases?
• This stage would mean higher CDRs
• Others say just a temporary setback
Reasons for it?1. Evolution (of the diseases,
not humans)
2. Poverty (diseases controlled in MDCs are spreading in LDCs)
3. Improved travel
Avian Flu, 2003 - 2006
Fig. 2-25: The first cases of avian flu in this outbreak were reported in Southeast Asia.
HIV/AIDS Prevalence Rates, 2005
Fig. 2-26: The highest HIV infection rates are in sub-Saharan Africa. India and China have large numbers of cases, but lower infection rates at present.
95% of people living with HIV and 99% of new cases in the last decade come from LDCs (sub-Saharan Africa hit particularly hard
Chapter 02: Review
02.01 The country with the second-largest population is
1. China2. Indonesia3. Russia4. United States5. India
02.01 The country with the second-largest population is
1. China2. Indonesia3. Russia4. United States5. India
02.02 The number of people per unit of arable land is the
1. Arithmetic density2. Physiological density3. Agricultural density4. Land-use density5. Population density
02.02 The number of people per unit of arable land is the
1. Arithmetic density2. Physiological density3. Agricultural density4. Land-use density5. Population density
02.03 Given a choice, people are most likely to live in a place that is
1. Wet 2. Dry 3. Cold 4. Warm 5. High
02.03 Given a choice, people are most likely to live in a place that is
1. Wet 2. Dry 3. Cold 4. Warm 5. High
02.04 Which of the following is the least significant factor affecting population growth rates?
1. Doubling times2. Sex ratio3. Total fertility rate4. Crude death rate5. Crude birth rate
02.04 Which of the following is the least significant factor affecting population growth rates?
1. Doubling times2. Sex ratio3. Total fertility rate4. Crude death rate5. Crude birth rate
02.05 Infant mortality rates are highest in
1. East Asia2. The Middle East3. South America4. Africa5. Central America
02.05 Infant mortality rates are highest in
1. East Asia2. The Middle East3. South America4. Africa5. Central America
02.06 In which stage of demographic transition are birth rates stable and death rates declining?
1. Stage 12. Stage 23. Stage 34. Stage 45. This situation does not occur in any of the four stages.
02.06 In which stage of demographic transition are birth rates stable and death rates declining?
1. Stage 12. Stage 23. Stage 34. Stage 45. This situation does not occur in any of the four stages.
02.07 Population growth rates are lowest in _________ of the demographic transition.
1. Stage 12. Stage 23. Stage 34. Stage 45. Stage 5
02.07 Population growth rates are lowest in _________ of the demographic transition.
1. Stage 12. Stage 23. Stage 34. Stage 45. Stage 5
02.08 Dependency ratios are highest in
1. Africa2. South America3. Europe4. North America5. East Asia
02.08 Dependency ratios are highest in
1. Africa2. South America3. Europe4. North America5. East Asia
02.09 According to Malthus, a growing population will eventually
1. Go to war with neighboring countries2. Outgrow its food supply3. Reach an infinite size4. Be decimated by infectious diseases5. Reach Stage 4
02.09 According to Malthus, a growing population will eventually
1. Go to war with neighboring countries2. Outgrow its food supply3. Reach an infinite size4. Be decimated by infectious diseases5. Reach Stage 4
02.10 The most lethal global epidemic disease in recent years has been
1. Tuberculosis2. Malaria3. AIDS4. SARS5. Ebola
02.10 The most lethal global epidemic disease in recent years has been
1. Tuberculosis2. Malaria3. AIDS4. SARS5. Ebola