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Population

Population. Michael Itagaki Sociology 101, Introduction to Sociology. Population. Demography Studies the size, composition, growth and distribution of human populations Relationship between population and the environment. Population. Thomas Malthus (1798)

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Population

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  1. Population Michael Itagaki Sociology 101, Introduction to Sociology

  2. Population • Demography • Studies the size, composition, growth and distribution of human populations • Relationship between population and the environment

  3. Population • Thomas Malthus (1798) • An Essay on the Principle of Population • Population grows exponentially 2 to 4 to 8 to 16… = 2x • Food supply increases arithmetically 1 to 2 to 3 to 4… = x+1

  4. Population • Thomas Malthus (1798) • Exponential growth: Penny example • 1 day, 1 cent; 2 days, 2 cents; 3 days, 4 cents • One week = $ 1.28 • Two weeks = $ 163.84 • Three weeks = $ 20,971.52 • Four weeks = $2,684,354.56

  5. Population • New Malthusians • Exponential population growth curve

  6. Figure 13.1 (p. 424)World Population: The Exponential Growth CurveSources: Piotrow 1973: 4; Haub 1995, 2004.

  7. Population • New Malthusians • Exponential population growth curve • Population will outgrow food supply • Anti-Malthusians • Exponential population growth curve is wrong • People adapt to the environment

  8. Population • Anti-Malthusians • Rational planning for having children • Increased food production • Technology/Agriculture • Ex.: Europe’s demographic transition

  9. Figure 13.3 (p. 426)The Demographic TransitionSource: By the author.

  10. Figure 13.1 (p. 424)World Population: The Exponential Growth CurveSources: Piotrow 1973: 4; Haub 1995, 2004.

  11. Population • Anti-Malthusians • Growth is slowing down • Demographic transition for rest of world

  12. Theoretical Views on Population Growth • New-Malthusians • Population growth = not enough food • Solution: limit population • Anti-Malthusians • More food available now than ever • Solution: Redistribution of food (political barriers)

  13. Symbolic Interactionism • Why do the poor want so many children? • Asset to the family • Taking the role of the other

  14. Figure 13.6 (p. 432)Why the Poor in the Least Industrialized Nations Want Many ChildrenBased on a survey in Indonesia, this figure shows how children are economic assets in the Least Industrialized Nations. Boys and girls can be net income earners for their families by the age of 9 or 10.Source: U.N. Fund for Population Activities.

  15. Functionalism • War, famine, disease are functional to society • Latent dysfunctions • Modern medicine • Public health practices

  16. Figure 13.3 (p. 426)The Demographic TransitionSource: By the author.

  17. Figure 13.7 (p. 433)Population Pyramids of Mexico and the United StatesSource: By the author. Computed from the U.S. Bureau of the Census, International Data Base, Table 94.

  18. Finals Week reminders • Final exam • Thursday, May 24, 1 p.m, Room 127 • No makeups • Everyone must take final to pass • Extra Credit due Tuesday, May 15

  19. Social Change • A shift in the characteristics of culture and society • Hunt/gather  Horticultural • Plow  Agricultural societies • Steam engine  Industrial Revolution • Microchip  Post-industrial/Information

  20. Social Change: The Environment Michael Itagaki Sociology 101, Introduction to Sociology

  21. The Environment: Global Warming/Climate Change • “An Inconvenient Truth” • Rising carbon dioxide levels • Correspond with rising temperatures • Ramifications? • Water: stronger storms/drought • Artic/Greenland: sea level • Climate: ecological niches

  22. The Environment: Global Warming • “An Inconvenient Truth” • Handout: 10 things to do • We have technology/resources to reduce our CO2 output and thus slow global warming process.

  23. The Environment: Global Warming • “An Inconvenient Truth” • What was a surprising/shocking fact in the film? • What can we do?

  24. The Environment: Global Warming • “An Inconvenient Truth” • Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change • Increase in temperatures caused by greenhouse gases • Temperature and sea levels will rise regardless • Sea levels will likely rise 7”-23”

  25. The Environment: Global Warming • “An Inconvenient Truth” • Caveats to consider • CO2 influence temperature? • Temperature influence CO2 ? • Both

  26. The Environment: Global Warming • “An Inconvenient Truth” • So what do you want to do? • Informed decisions • Do you believe you can make a difference?

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