SlideShare a Scribd company logo
HUMAN POPULATION
Performed by: 8D01500 - Geography 1st year
doctoral student of specialty Kadyrkhanova Zhansaya
Chapter Overview
• China: One Child Policy Case Study
• Our World at 8 Billion
• Demography
• Population and Society
• Family Planning and Reproductive Policy
Working with a dictionary
1. Rate of growth is slowing - өсу қарқыны баяулайды
2. Global growth rate - жаһандық өсу қарқыны
3. Population Bomb – демографиялық жарылыс
4. Highest density - ең жоғарғы тығыздық
5. Lowest density – ең төменгі тығыздық
6. Population growth – халықтың өсуі
7. Habitat alteration- тіршілік ортасының өзгеруі
8. Global climate change-жахандық климаттың өзгеруі
9. Denser populations-популяцияның тығыздығы
10.War,conflict,refugees-соғыс, қақтығыс, босқындар
11.Economic loss- экономикалық шығын
12.Health impact- денсаулыққа әсер
13.More fossil fuel use- қазба отынды көбірек пайдалану
Central Case Study: China’s One-
Child Policy
• In 1970, China’s 790 million people
faced starvation
• The government instituted a one-child
policy
• The growth rate plummeted
• The policy is now less strict
but has unwanted consequences:
• Killing of female infants
• Black-market trade in teenaged girls
OUR WORLD AT 8 BILLION
AND COUNTING…
Our world at eight billion
• Populations continue to rise in most countries
• Particularly in poverty-stricken developing nations
• Although the rate of growth is slowing, we are still increasing
in numbers
Counting to 1 billion
(1/second) would take 31
years—it would take 221
years to count to 8 billion!
Just how fast is the population
growing?
• Our population grows by over 80 million each year
• It took until 1800 to reach 1 billion
• We added 6 more billion in 130 years
• We added the most
recent billion in 12 years
Because of exponential
growth (increase by a fixed
%), even if the growth rate
remains steady, population
will continue to grow
Growth rates vary from region to region
• At today’s 1.2% global growth rate, the population will double in
58 years (natural log(ln) of doubling or 2…70/1.2 = 58)
• If China’s rate had continued at 2.8%, it would have had 2 billion
people within 25 years
Is there a limit to population
growth?(Have we reached our carry
capacity?
• Technology, sanitation, medication, and food increase population
• Death rates drop, but not birth rates
• Earth’s carrying capacity for people?
• 2 billion prosperous people
• 33 billion very poor people
• Thomas Malthus’ An Essay on the Principles of Population (1798)
• War, disease, starvation will reduce populations
Different views on population growth
• Thomas Malthus’ An Essay on the Principles of Population (1798)
• War, disease, starvation will reduce populations
• Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb (1968) predicted that
population growth would lead to famine and conflict
• But intensified food production fed more people(Green Revolution)
• Many economists think depleted resources will be replaced or new
resources created
• But many resources (e.g., species) cannot be replaced
• Quality of life will suffer with unchecked growth
• Less space, food, wealth per person
• Population growth is a problem if it depletes resources, stresses
social systems, and degrades the environment
Population growth: causes and
consequences
Ehrlich and Holden’s IPAT model
• Using the IPAT model: I = P  A  T
• Our total impact (I) on the environment results from:
• Population (P): individuals need space and resources
• Affluence (A): per capita resource use
• Technology (T): increases use of, or protects, resources
• Sensitivity (S): a fourth factor showing how sensitive an area is to
human pressure
• Further model refinements include the effects of education, laws,
and ethics on the formula
Do Now: in notes
• Brainstorm with a classmate +/- of technology
• Make 3 columns-
• Technology + -
China is an example of the IPAT
formula
• Elements of the IPAT equation can combine
• Causing tremendous impact in a very short time
• Modern China’s rapid development is causing unprecedented
environmental challenges
• Intensive agriculture is eroding farmland
• Overuse has dried up the mighty Yellow River
• Increasing vehicles are causing urban pollution and massive traffic jams
• China shows us what the rest of the world can become
DEMOGRAPHY
Do Now
• Recall population
ecology…
What aspects of the
population of a species
are studied or
examined?
• What do you know…
People live (inland cold
interior, coastal
tropical)?
The most people live
in(India, China or
USA)?
Populations are getting
(younger, older)?
Demography
• Demographers study:
• Population size
• Density and
distribution
• Age structure
• Sex ratio
• Birth, death, immigration, and
emigration rates
• Demography: applying the principles of population
ecology to the study of change in human populations
Population size and density
• The UN predicts 9 billion humans by 2050
• Highest density: temperate, subtropical, tropical biomes
• Coasts, rivers, cities
• Lowest density: extreme climates (desert, rainforest, tundra)
• Also, areas away from water
If women have just 0.5 child
fewer than the medium
scenario, there will be 8,
not 9.15, billion by 2050
Population distribution: What can you
conclude?
• Humans are unevenly distributed around the globe
• Many unpopulated areas (e.g., deserts, arid grasslands) are environmentally
sensitive
• High S value in the modified IPAT equation
• Vulnerable to humans (agriculture, ranching, etc.)
How does age structure affect
population structure?
• Age structure: describes relative numbers of individuals in each
age class
• Shown by age structure diagrams (population pyramids)
• Wide base: has many young that haven’t reproduced yet
• Population will soon grow rapidly
• Even age distribution:
• Remains stable
• Births = deaths
Canada’s age structure is
balanced (growth rate = 0.4%)
Madagascar’s age structure is
heavily weighted toward the
young (growth rate = 2.9%)
Examples:
Trend Now: Population is getting
older
• The global mean age is now 28—in 2050, it will be 38
• China’s age structure is changing
• In 1970, the median
age was 20
• By 2050, it
will be 45
Although fewer
people will be
working to support
social programs,
the elderly can
remain productive
Sex ratios affect population dynamics
• Human sex ratios at birth slightly favor males
• For every 100 females born, 106 males are born
• Chinese females are selectively aborted
• 120 boys were reported for 100 girls
• The undesirable social consequences?
• Many single Chinese men
• Teenaged girls are kidnapped and sold as brides
What factors determine how a
population changes?
• Rates of birth, death, and migration determine whether a
population grows, shrinks, or remains stable
• Birth and immigration add individuals
• Death and emigration remove individuals
• Technological advances cause decreased deaths
• The increased gap between birth and death rates resulted in population
expansion
• Natural rate of population change: change due to birth and
death rates alone, excluding migration
Falling growth rates do not mean fewer
people
Despite falling growth
rates, the population
continues growing by
adding 80 million people
each year
Factors affecting total fertility rate
• Total fertility rate (TFR): the average number of children born
to each female during her lifetime
• Replacement fertility: the TFR that keeps the size of a
population stable (about 2.1)
• Causes of decreasing TFR:
• Medical care reduces infant mortality
• Urbanization increases childcare costs
• Children go to school instead of working
• Social Security supports the elderly
• Educated women enter the labor force
Life expectancy is increasing
• People live longer in countries with good sanitation, health care,
and food
• Urbanization, industrialization, and personal wealth reduces
rates of infant mortality
• Which increases life expectancy (the time a person can expect to live)
• Demographic transition: a model of economic and cultural
change
• Explains the declining death and birth rates in industrializing nations
The demographic transition
• As they industrialize, nations move from a stable pre-industrial state
of high birth and death rates
• To a stable post-industrial state of low birth and death rates
• Industrialization decreases mortality rates
• So there is less need for large families
• Parents invest in quality of life, not quantity of kids
• Death rates fall before birth rates
• Resulting in temporary population growth
The 4 stages of the demographic
transition
• Pre-industrial stage: low population growth
• High death (disease, starvation, few medicines) and birth (compensation for
mortality) rates
• Transitional stage: industrialization, increased food and medical
care reduce mortality rates
• High birth rates cause population to surge
• Industrial stage: women get jobs and use birth control
• Kids do not need to help get food
• Post-industrial stage: low birth and death rates stabilize
populations
The demographic transition’s four
stages
Population growth is seen as a temporary phenomenon
Is the demographic transition
universal?
• It has occurred in Europe, the U.S., Canada, Japan, and other
nations over the past 200–300 years
• But it may or may not apply to developing nations
• The transition could fail:
• If the population is too large to allow the transition
• In cultures that place greater value on childbirth or grant women fewer
freedoms
For people to attain the material standard of living of
North Americans, we would need the natural resources of
4.5 more Earths
POPULATION AND
SOCIETY
Do Now: On Socrative
• Should we fund efforts for family planning in other
countries or not?
Population and Society: family planing is
key to slowing growth rate
• Family planning: efforts to plan the number and spacing of children
• The greatest single factor slowing population growth
• Clinics offer advice, information, and contraceptives
• Birth control: controlling the number of children born by reducing
the frequency of pregnancy
• Contraception: deliberate prevention of pregnancy through a
variety of methods
• Drawback -Hindered by religious and cultural influences
• Benefits- it works! Rates range from 10% (Africa) to 86% (China)
Empowering women reduces fertility
rates
• A nation’s fertility rates drop when women gain access
• To contraceptives, family planning programs, and educational opportunities
• Women need control over
their reproductive window:
• The time in their lives
when they can become
pregnant
Educating women reduces
fertility rates, delays
childbirth, and gives them a
voice in reproductive decisions
A woman controls her reproductive
window
• Jobs or school delays the birth of a first child
• Contraceptives space births
• The window is “closed” after the desired number of kids
Policies and family planning work
• Funding and policies that encourage family planning lower
population growth rates in all nations
• Thailand’s education-based approach to family planning reduced its
growth rate from 2.3% to 0.6%
• Brazil, Mexico, Iran, Cuba, and other developing countries have active
programs
• 1994’s UN population conference in Cairo, Egypt, called for
universal access to reproductive health care
• Offer education, health care, and address social needs
• Global funding has fallen 33%, slowing progress
Family planning reduces fertility
rates
Blue: with
family planning
Red: without
family planning
Poverty and population growth are
correlated
• Poor societies have higher
population growth rates
• Poverty and population
growth make each other
worse
99% of the next billion people added will be born in
poor, less developed regions that are least able to
support them
Poverty causes environmental
degradation
• Population growth in poor nations increases environmental
degradation
• Farming degrades soil in arid areas (Africa, China)
• Poor people cut forests,
deplete biodiversity,
and hunt endangered
species
Poor people hunt “bush
meat”—driving even
great apes to extinction
Wealth also impacts the environment
• Affluent societies have
enormous resource
consumption
• With severe, far-reaching
environmental impacts
• Ecological footprints are huge
One American has as
much environmental
impact as 3.5 Chinese or
9 Indians or 13 Afghans
We must reduce population growth and consumption
• For a high standard of living and quality of life for all, developing
nations must slow their population growth
• Their consumption
is also increasing
• Developed nations
must slow their
consumption
Our global
ecological footprint
is 50% more than the
Earth can support
Conclusion
• The human population is larger than it has ever been
• Rates are decreasing but populations are still rising
• Most developed nations have passed through the demographic
transition
• Expanding women’s rights slows population growth
• How will the population stop rising?
• The demographic transition, governmental intervention, or disease and social
conflict?
• Sustainability requires a stabilized population to avoid destroying
natural systems

More Related Content

PPT
Global Population 2014
PPTX
Population growth & its effect on environment
PDF
10. population changes
PPT
Week 3 Lecture 3.2 Human-population.ppt
PPTX
Unit 3. Population
PPTX
Population
PPT
DEMOGRAPHY in community health nursing, study about the population
PPT
8.2 human population
Global Population 2014
Population growth & its effect on environment
10. population changes
Week 3 Lecture 3.2 Human-population.ppt
Unit 3. Population
Population
DEMOGRAPHY in community health nursing, study about the population
8.2 human population

Similar to 7 CӨЖ Қадырханова Ж.Ж.pptx (20)

PPTX
Environmental Studies_Human population and the environment.pptx
PPT
Demography
PPTX
Gcse unit 2 revision-edited for 2014
PPTX
art and environment: modern art and the urban environment.pptx
PPTX
group 8 - overpopulation.pptx very impo
PPTX
Population expl.pptx
PPTX
human population environment
PPTX
Population change revision
PPTX
What Is Demography? Introduction to Demography
PPTX
Population
PPT
Human Population - Environmental Science.ppt
PDF
Chapter 1_part 2.pdfHuman Population and the environment
PDF
Chapter 1.pptxthe Interdisciplinary nature of environmental science Chapter 1...
PDF
Chapter 1_part MULTIDISCIPLINARY-NATURE-OF-ENVIRONMENTAL-STUDIES.pdf
PPT
INTRODUCTION OF POPULATION GEOGRAPHY
PPTX
Population explosion
PPTX
Geo23.1102 winter2015 session3
PPTX
Human population and environment
PDF
Lecture 26_230720_134454.pdf
PPTX
LESSON-3.pptxjsjsisosksjjsjsjzzjjnbnnnjsjsjsn
Environmental Studies_Human population and the environment.pptx
Demography
Gcse unit 2 revision-edited for 2014
art and environment: modern art and the urban environment.pptx
group 8 - overpopulation.pptx very impo
Population expl.pptx
human population environment
Population change revision
What Is Demography? Introduction to Demography
Population
Human Population - Environmental Science.ppt
Chapter 1_part 2.pdfHuman Population and the environment
Chapter 1.pptxthe Interdisciplinary nature of environmental science Chapter 1...
Chapter 1_part MULTIDISCIPLINARY-NATURE-OF-ENVIRONMENTAL-STUDIES.pdf
INTRODUCTION OF POPULATION GEOGRAPHY
Population explosion
Geo23.1102 winter2015 session3
Human population and environment
Lecture 26_230720_134454.pdf
LESSON-3.pptxjsjsisosksjjsjsjzzjjnbnnnjsjsjsn

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Landforms and landscapes data surprise preview
PPTX
Open Quiz Monsoon Mind Game Prelims.pptx
PDF
Module 3: Health Systems Tutorial Slides S2 2025
PPTX
IMMUNIZATION PROGRAMME pptx
PPTX
Odoo 18 Sales_ Managing Quotation Validity
PPTX
UNDER FIVE CLINICS OR WELL BABY CLINICS.pptx
PPTX
HISTORY COLLECTION FOR PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS.pptx
PDF
LDMMIA Reiki Yoga S2 L3 Vod Sample Preview
PPTX
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 18 POS
DOCX
UPPER GASTRO INTESTINAL DISORDER.docx
PDF
3.The-Rise-of-the-Marathas.pdfppt/pdf/8th class social science Exploring Soci...
PDF
5.Universal-Franchise-and-Indias-Electoral-System.pdfppt/pdf/8th class social...
PPTX
An introduction to Dialogue writing.pptx
PDF
UTS Health Student Promotional Representative_Position Description.pdf
PPTX
NOI Hackathon - Summer Edition - GreenThumber.pptx
PPTX
How to Manage Loyalty Points in Odoo 18 Sales
PDF
Types of Literary Text: Poetry and Prose
PPTX
ACUTE NASOPHARYNGITIS. pptx
PPTX
Skill Development Program For Physiotherapy Students by SRY.pptx
PPTX
Introduction_to_Human_Anatomy_and_Physiology_for_B.Pharm.pptx
Landforms and landscapes data surprise preview
Open Quiz Monsoon Mind Game Prelims.pptx
Module 3: Health Systems Tutorial Slides S2 2025
IMMUNIZATION PROGRAMME pptx
Odoo 18 Sales_ Managing Quotation Validity
UNDER FIVE CLINICS OR WELL BABY CLINICS.pptx
HISTORY COLLECTION FOR PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS.pptx
LDMMIA Reiki Yoga S2 L3 Vod Sample Preview
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 18 POS
UPPER GASTRO INTESTINAL DISORDER.docx
3.The-Rise-of-the-Marathas.pdfppt/pdf/8th class social science Exploring Soci...
5.Universal-Franchise-and-Indias-Electoral-System.pdfppt/pdf/8th class social...
An introduction to Dialogue writing.pptx
UTS Health Student Promotional Representative_Position Description.pdf
NOI Hackathon - Summer Edition - GreenThumber.pptx
How to Manage Loyalty Points in Odoo 18 Sales
Types of Literary Text: Poetry and Prose
ACUTE NASOPHARYNGITIS. pptx
Skill Development Program For Physiotherapy Students by SRY.pptx
Introduction_to_Human_Anatomy_and_Physiology_for_B.Pharm.pptx

7 CӨЖ Қадырханова Ж.Ж.pptx

  • 1. HUMAN POPULATION Performed by: 8D01500 - Geography 1st year doctoral student of specialty Kadyrkhanova Zhansaya
  • 2. Chapter Overview • China: One Child Policy Case Study • Our World at 8 Billion • Demography • Population and Society • Family Planning and Reproductive Policy
  • 3. Working with a dictionary 1. Rate of growth is slowing - өсу қарқыны баяулайды 2. Global growth rate - жаһандық өсу қарқыны 3. Population Bomb – демографиялық жарылыс 4. Highest density - ең жоғарғы тығыздық 5. Lowest density – ең төменгі тығыздық 6. Population growth – халықтың өсуі 7. Habitat alteration- тіршілік ортасының өзгеруі 8. Global climate change-жахандық климаттың өзгеруі 9. Denser populations-популяцияның тығыздығы 10.War,conflict,refugees-соғыс, қақтығыс, босқындар 11.Economic loss- экономикалық шығын 12.Health impact- денсаулыққа әсер 13.More fossil fuel use- қазба отынды көбірек пайдалану
  • 4. Central Case Study: China’s One- Child Policy • In 1970, China’s 790 million people faced starvation • The government instituted a one-child policy • The growth rate plummeted • The policy is now less strict but has unwanted consequences: • Killing of female infants • Black-market trade in teenaged girls
  • 5. OUR WORLD AT 8 BILLION AND COUNTING…
  • 6. Our world at eight billion • Populations continue to rise in most countries • Particularly in poverty-stricken developing nations • Although the rate of growth is slowing, we are still increasing in numbers Counting to 1 billion (1/second) would take 31 years—it would take 221 years to count to 8 billion!
  • 7. Just how fast is the population growing? • Our population grows by over 80 million each year • It took until 1800 to reach 1 billion • We added 6 more billion in 130 years • We added the most recent billion in 12 years Because of exponential growth (increase by a fixed %), even if the growth rate remains steady, population will continue to grow
  • 8. Growth rates vary from region to region • At today’s 1.2% global growth rate, the population will double in 58 years (natural log(ln) of doubling or 2…70/1.2 = 58) • If China’s rate had continued at 2.8%, it would have had 2 billion people within 25 years
  • 9. Is there a limit to population growth?(Have we reached our carry capacity? • Technology, sanitation, medication, and food increase population • Death rates drop, but not birth rates • Earth’s carrying capacity for people? • 2 billion prosperous people • 33 billion very poor people • Thomas Malthus’ An Essay on the Principles of Population (1798) • War, disease, starvation will reduce populations
  • 10. Different views on population growth • Thomas Malthus’ An Essay on the Principles of Population (1798) • War, disease, starvation will reduce populations • Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb (1968) predicted that population growth would lead to famine and conflict • But intensified food production fed more people(Green Revolution) • Many economists think depleted resources will be replaced or new resources created • But many resources (e.g., species) cannot be replaced • Quality of life will suffer with unchecked growth • Less space, food, wealth per person • Population growth is a problem if it depletes resources, stresses social systems, and degrades the environment
  • 11. Population growth: causes and consequences
  • 12. Ehrlich and Holden’s IPAT model • Using the IPAT model: I = P  A  T • Our total impact (I) on the environment results from: • Population (P): individuals need space and resources • Affluence (A): per capita resource use • Technology (T): increases use of, or protects, resources • Sensitivity (S): a fourth factor showing how sensitive an area is to human pressure • Further model refinements include the effects of education, laws, and ethics on the formula
  • 13. Do Now: in notes • Brainstorm with a classmate +/- of technology • Make 3 columns- • Technology + -
  • 14. China is an example of the IPAT formula • Elements of the IPAT equation can combine • Causing tremendous impact in a very short time • Modern China’s rapid development is causing unprecedented environmental challenges • Intensive agriculture is eroding farmland • Overuse has dried up the mighty Yellow River • Increasing vehicles are causing urban pollution and massive traffic jams • China shows us what the rest of the world can become
  • 16. Do Now • Recall population ecology… What aspects of the population of a species are studied or examined? • What do you know… People live (inland cold interior, coastal tropical)? The most people live in(India, China or USA)? Populations are getting (younger, older)?
  • 17. Demography • Demographers study: • Population size • Density and distribution • Age structure • Sex ratio • Birth, death, immigration, and emigration rates • Demography: applying the principles of population ecology to the study of change in human populations
  • 18. Population size and density • The UN predicts 9 billion humans by 2050 • Highest density: temperate, subtropical, tropical biomes • Coasts, rivers, cities • Lowest density: extreme climates (desert, rainforest, tundra) • Also, areas away from water If women have just 0.5 child fewer than the medium scenario, there will be 8, not 9.15, billion by 2050
  • 19. Population distribution: What can you conclude? • Humans are unevenly distributed around the globe • Many unpopulated areas (e.g., deserts, arid grasslands) are environmentally sensitive • High S value in the modified IPAT equation • Vulnerable to humans (agriculture, ranching, etc.)
  • 20. How does age structure affect population structure? • Age structure: describes relative numbers of individuals in each age class • Shown by age structure diagrams (population pyramids) • Wide base: has many young that haven’t reproduced yet • Population will soon grow rapidly • Even age distribution: • Remains stable • Births = deaths
  • 21. Canada’s age structure is balanced (growth rate = 0.4%) Madagascar’s age structure is heavily weighted toward the young (growth rate = 2.9%) Examples:
  • 22. Trend Now: Population is getting older • The global mean age is now 28—in 2050, it will be 38 • China’s age structure is changing • In 1970, the median age was 20 • By 2050, it will be 45 Although fewer people will be working to support social programs, the elderly can remain productive
  • 23. Sex ratios affect population dynamics • Human sex ratios at birth slightly favor males • For every 100 females born, 106 males are born • Chinese females are selectively aborted • 120 boys were reported for 100 girls • The undesirable social consequences? • Many single Chinese men • Teenaged girls are kidnapped and sold as brides
  • 24. What factors determine how a population changes? • Rates of birth, death, and migration determine whether a population grows, shrinks, or remains stable • Birth and immigration add individuals • Death and emigration remove individuals • Technological advances cause decreased deaths • The increased gap between birth and death rates resulted in population expansion • Natural rate of population change: change due to birth and death rates alone, excluding migration
  • 25. Falling growth rates do not mean fewer people Despite falling growth rates, the population continues growing by adding 80 million people each year
  • 26. Factors affecting total fertility rate • Total fertility rate (TFR): the average number of children born to each female during her lifetime • Replacement fertility: the TFR that keeps the size of a population stable (about 2.1) • Causes of decreasing TFR: • Medical care reduces infant mortality • Urbanization increases childcare costs • Children go to school instead of working • Social Security supports the elderly • Educated women enter the labor force
  • 27. Life expectancy is increasing • People live longer in countries with good sanitation, health care, and food • Urbanization, industrialization, and personal wealth reduces rates of infant mortality • Which increases life expectancy (the time a person can expect to live) • Demographic transition: a model of economic and cultural change • Explains the declining death and birth rates in industrializing nations
  • 28. The demographic transition • As they industrialize, nations move from a stable pre-industrial state of high birth and death rates • To a stable post-industrial state of low birth and death rates • Industrialization decreases mortality rates • So there is less need for large families • Parents invest in quality of life, not quantity of kids • Death rates fall before birth rates • Resulting in temporary population growth
  • 29. The 4 stages of the demographic transition • Pre-industrial stage: low population growth • High death (disease, starvation, few medicines) and birth (compensation for mortality) rates • Transitional stage: industrialization, increased food and medical care reduce mortality rates • High birth rates cause population to surge • Industrial stage: women get jobs and use birth control • Kids do not need to help get food • Post-industrial stage: low birth and death rates stabilize populations
  • 30. The demographic transition’s four stages Population growth is seen as a temporary phenomenon
  • 31. Is the demographic transition universal? • It has occurred in Europe, the U.S., Canada, Japan, and other nations over the past 200–300 years • But it may or may not apply to developing nations • The transition could fail: • If the population is too large to allow the transition • In cultures that place greater value on childbirth or grant women fewer freedoms For people to attain the material standard of living of North Americans, we would need the natural resources of 4.5 more Earths
  • 33. Do Now: On Socrative • Should we fund efforts for family planning in other countries or not?
  • 34. Population and Society: family planing is key to slowing growth rate • Family planning: efforts to plan the number and spacing of children • The greatest single factor slowing population growth • Clinics offer advice, information, and contraceptives • Birth control: controlling the number of children born by reducing the frequency of pregnancy • Contraception: deliberate prevention of pregnancy through a variety of methods • Drawback -Hindered by religious and cultural influences • Benefits- it works! Rates range from 10% (Africa) to 86% (China)
  • 35. Empowering women reduces fertility rates • A nation’s fertility rates drop when women gain access • To contraceptives, family planning programs, and educational opportunities • Women need control over their reproductive window: • The time in their lives when they can become pregnant Educating women reduces fertility rates, delays childbirth, and gives them a voice in reproductive decisions
  • 36. A woman controls her reproductive window • Jobs or school delays the birth of a first child • Contraceptives space births • The window is “closed” after the desired number of kids
  • 37. Policies and family planning work • Funding and policies that encourage family planning lower population growth rates in all nations • Thailand’s education-based approach to family planning reduced its growth rate from 2.3% to 0.6% • Brazil, Mexico, Iran, Cuba, and other developing countries have active programs • 1994’s UN population conference in Cairo, Egypt, called for universal access to reproductive health care • Offer education, health care, and address social needs • Global funding has fallen 33%, slowing progress
  • 38. Family planning reduces fertility rates Blue: with family planning Red: without family planning
  • 39. Poverty and population growth are correlated • Poor societies have higher population growth rates • Poverty and population growth make each other worse 99% of the next billion people added will be born in poor, less developed regions that are least able to support them
  • 40. Poverty causes environmental degradation • Population growth in poor nations increases environmental degradation • Farming degrades soil in arid areas (Africa, China) • Poor people cut forests, deplete biodiversity, and hunt endangered species Poor people hunt “bush meat”—driving even great apes to extinction
  • 41. Wealth also impacts the environment • Affluent societies have enormous resource consumption • With severe, far-reaching environmental impacts • Ecological footprints are huge One American has as much environmental impact as 3.5 Chinese or 9 Indians or 13 Afghans
  • 42. We must reduce population growth and consumption • For a high standard of living and quality of life for all, developing nations must slow their population growth • Their consumption is also increasing • Developed nations must slow their consumption Our global ecological footprint is 50% more than the Earth can support
  • 43. Conclusion • The human population is larger than it has ever been • Rates are decreasing but populations are still rising • Most developed nations have passed through the demographic transition • Expanding women’s rights slows population growth • How will the population stop rising? • The demographic transition, governmental intervention, or disease and social conflict? • Sustainability requires a stabilized population to avoid destroying natural systems