1 / 32

Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright

Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright. Chapter 6. Population and Development. In Brief, This Chapter Is About. Improving the lives of people Reducing fertility rates Protecting the environment. What’s happened in the last 30 years?. Average income?

lois-mullen
Télécharger la présentation

Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright Chapter 6 Population and Development

  2. In Brief, This Chapter Is About • Improving the lives of people • Reducing fertility rates • Protecting the environment

  3. What’s happened in the last 30 years? • Average income? • Up 37%! • Infant mortality? • Down by half!  • Adult literacy? • Up 22%  • Birth rate? • Down by 39%

  4. On the Other side… • 1.2 billion still live on < $1/day  • We may max out at ~ 10 billion, which may be unsustainable 

  5. Bottom Line • Given the choice, most of us would rather be rich than poor (OK, so it’s not profound!) • Population pressures, particularly in developing countries, degrade the environment. • The ways to reduce the environmental effects of population pressures are to • Work on population control, even before development happens • Development (properly done) reduces environmental degradation • All this is easier said than done, and complicated.

  6. Reassessing the Demographic Transition • Development must be linked to a reduction in poverty (this is usually tautological) • Existing poverty is an affront to humanity and should not be tolerated (but eliminating it is complicated) • Both poverty and development are threats to the health of the environment

  7. Demographic Transition: Developed and Developing Countries Developing countries continued to have high birth rates, even when death rates declined- net result is a population increase that will continue.

  8. Fertility Rate and Income Not a straight line; and ??leads to questions.

  9. Reasons for Large Families in Developing Countries • Old age security • Infant and childhood mortality rates • Children are an economic asset • Importance of education • Status of women • Availability of contraceptives

  10. The Poverty Cycle

  11. Contraceptive Use and Fertility Rates

  12. Bottom line- fertility IS dropping; Developed countries have a population deficit

  13. Adult Female Illiteracy: A Global Comparison This could be an example of “junk science”, misleading at a minimum. Critical to this is knowing the rate of literacy among males in these countries, or it’s meaningless

  14. Promoting Development: Good and Bad News • Millennium development goals • World agencies at work (World Bank, UNDP, WHO) • The debt crisis • Development aid

  15. Some Sobering Facts • One-fifth of the world’s population (1.2 billion) live on less than $1/day • 1.5 billion lack access to clean water • 2.4 billion lack access to sanitary facilities

  16. Some Sobering Facts • 790 million are malnourished • Environmental degradation is rampant • Fertility rates highest in poorest countries

  17. Millennium Development Goals (Table 6-2)1997, UN, World Bank, Org. for Economic Cooperation & Dev. (OECD), Goals by 2015 • Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger • Achieve universal primary education • Promote gender equality in education and empower women (Values!) • Reduce child mortality

  18. Millennium Development Goals (Table 6-2) • Improve maternal health • Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases • Ensure environmental sustainability • Forge a global partnership for development

  19. Millennium Development Goal-How’s the world doing???

  20. The Debt Crisis • $2.44 trillion in 2001 • The typical credit–debt trap • Creditor countries primary beneficiaries • MAJOR PROBLEMS: CORRUPTION & MISMANAGEMENT!!!

  21. Coping with the Debt Crisis • Grow cash crops  • Develop austerity measures  • Exploit natural resources 

  22. Development Aid

  23. A New Direction: Social Modernization • Improving education for girls and women • Improving health and lowering infant mortality • Making “family planning” accessible • Enhancing income through employment opportunities • Improving resource management

  24. The Greatest Challenge to Health Care in Developing Countries • AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome)

  25. Effect of AIDS on Future Population Structure

  26. Impacts of AIDS Epidemic • 90% of all HIV-infected people (50 million by 2004) live in developing countries • Life expectancy in Botswana was 61 years in 1980 – now 39 years • One million elementary students lost teachers • 25 million AIDS orphans in developing world by 2010 • What works: changing sexual ethics.

  27. Family Planning • Counseling on: STDs, contraceptives, spacing children, pregnancy avoidance • Supplying contraceptives • Pre- and postnatal care

  28. Employment and Income: Grameen Bank Loans (Microlending) • Primarily to women • Do not upset existing social structure • Utilize local resources • Utilize central work places • Help develop self-reliance

  29. Resource Management • Replant trees • Prevent erosion • Resource management educational programs

  30. Putting It All Together: Social Development

  31. What you need to know from Chapter 6:See bottom line slideUnderstand the broad relationships between: Income and Fertility Poverty and Environmental degradationReasons for Large families in developing countriesFertility trends- Table 6-1Major causes of Third world debtEffects of 3rd World debt upon the environmentEffects of AIDS on population and Environment.

  32. Bottom Line • Given the choice, most of us would rather be rich than poor (OK, so it’s not profound!) • Population pressures, particularly in developing countries, degrade the environment. • The ways to reduce the environmental effects of population pressures are to • Work on population control, even before development happens • Development (properly done) reduces environmental degradation • All this is easier said than done, and complicated.

More Related