Chapter 2: Population and Migration Patterns and Processes
Key Concepts:
Basic Population Statistics
- Population growth involves two main concepts: rate of natural increase (RNI) and the demographic equation. * The demographic equation uses uses birth rates, death rates, immigration, and emigration statistics to show population growth
- Birth rate, also known as natality, is the crude birth rate (CBR) and an annual statistic * High birth rates: rural agricultural Third-World countries * Low birth rates: urbanized industrial and service-based economies * Ex: total number of infants born living is counted for one calendar year and then calculated * CBR: Number of Live Births/Total Population x 1,000
- Death rate, also known as the mortality rate, is the crude death rate (CDR) and an annual statistic calculated in the same way as the birth rate. * High death rates: a country that is experiencing war, disease, or famine, such as poor Third-World countries experiencing poverty, poor nutrition, epidemic disease, and a lack of medical care. * Green Revolution: (increased food and nutrition) and access to sanitation, education, and health care * CDR: Number of Deaths/Total Population x 1,000
- The rate of natural increase (RNI), or the natural increase rate (NIR) is the annual percentage of population growth of that country for that one-year period. * RNI: Birth Rate - Death Rate/10%
- Negative RNI means the population has shrunk * Happens in in highly urbanized First-World countries and where the traditional roles of women in the country of mother and housewife have deteriorated significantly
- Reduced fecundity: when the majority of women are heavily engaged in business, they are far less likely to have children * Double-income no-kid (DINK) households and single-parent–single-child homes are far more common; higher rates of divorce
- Natural increase does not account for immigration or emigration * Ex: a country with a high rate of natural increase can have an unexpectedly low long-term population prediction if there is a large amount of emigration
- Doubling Time: how long it would take for a country to double in size * Formula: 70Rate of Natural Increase
- To estimate the RNI for each year in the future by examining a country’s position: (Pop. × RNI1) + (Pop. × RNI2) + (Pop. × RNI3) + (Pop. × RNIn) = Future Population
- Net Migration Rate (NMR): the number of immigrants minus the number of emigrants for every thousand members of the population; can be negative * Formula: Number of Immigrants - Number of Emigrants/Population /1,000
- Population Growth Percentage Rate = (Birth Rate - Death Rate) + Net Migration Rate/10%
- Total fertility rate (TFR) is the estimated average number of children born to each female of birthing age (15 to 45) * Formula: Number of Children Born/Women Aged 15 to 45
- Replacement rate is a TFR of 2.1 * A large population must have 2.1 children per female of birthing age.
- Dependency ratio provides the number of people too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in the work force
MODELS
- The demographic transition model (DTM) is a theory of how population changes over time and provides insights into issues of migration, fertility, economic development, industrialization, urbanization, labor, politics, and the role of women. * Newly industrialized countries (NICs) can also be placed on the model, but you have to change the dates as to when they reach the significant turning points in their history
- The epidemiological transition model (ETM) specifically accounts for development due to the increasing population growth rates caused by medical advances * The phase of development is directly followed by a stabilization of population growth as the procreation rates decline * Can predict how its population will change over time and speculate as to how much it can grow in size * Ex: we can estimate a population projection that the planet’s population has reached only about two-thirds of its potential
- The S-Curve of Population * Ex: an animal population that receives a vast amount of food or removes predators from their habitat will result rapid population growth followed by a plateau or decline due to a population reaching or exceeding the area’s carrying capacity
Stage-By-Stage
- Stage One: * Historically characterized by pre-agricultural societies engaged in subsistence farming and transhumance * Birth rates and death rates fluctuate due to climate, warfare, disease, and ecological factors, but overall, both rates are high * Child mortality and infant mortality were very high * Result: little population growth until the later part of stage one when death rates begin to decline; RNI is generally low or negative * Present-day Third-World countries engaged in long periods of warfare have late stage one characteristics
- Stage Two: * Typically agriculturally based economies * Birth rates remain high and life expectancy rises while death rates decline over time; RNI increases * Infant and child mortality is still an issue due to a lack of medical care and * Poor nutrition for expectant mothers and infants * The vast majority of populations in stage two countries live in rural regions as a result of agriculture’s economic prominence
- Stage Two 1/2: * NIC countries are characterized by economies that focus on manufacturing as the primary form of economic production and employment * Birth and death rates decline * Rapid population growth; high RNIs; rapidly increasing rate of urbanization * Migrants responding to the pull factor of employment opportunity rapidly fill the cities
- Stage Three: * Historically where most “industrialized” or manufacturing-based countries were found in the transition * Shifted their economies to a more service-based focus * Birth and death rates decline due to urbanization * The diffusion of fertility control due to access to health care and the availability of contraceptives as well as reducing the diffusion of disease due to medical advances
- Stage Four and Five * Birth and death rates converge to result in limited population growth and population decline * Service industries like finance, insurance, real estate, health care, and communications that drive the economy; manufacturing is dying * Ex: in the United States, services are 80 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP) and manufacturing is only 20 percent * Both the final stages of the DTM and ETM occur when birth rates bottom out into the lower teens * Zero population growth (ZPG) (RNI of 0.0 percent): birth rates reach the same level as death rates * Elderly population means fewer people investing their money: * Causing less money to circulate through the society, which results in stagnation * Lower tax base to support the rest of the nation * Shortage of labor supply
- Countries that are near or below zero population growth levels offer incentives to citizens to have more children. * With so few children being born, fewer people enter the workforce over time * Become dependent upon foreign guest workers
- Many former Communist countries of Eastern Europe have stage four demographic characteristics * Economic restructuring has brought economic, political, and social hardship to many communities
- Malthusian Theory states that the global population would one day expand to the point where it could not produce enough food to feed everyone. * Malthus saw was that food production did grow over time but in a slow arithmetic manner, while human population grows exponentially * As new food products and methods were adopted, another large volume of food would be added to global production and supply * This meant that food production has continued to stay ahead of population growth.
- The science of genetics did not make any impact on global food production until the 1950s
- Neo-Malthusians warn that a Malthusian catastrophe could still occur.
- Sustainability. If too many of the world’s current growing areas are damaged, can food production keep up with the increased demand?
- Increasing Per Capita Demand. Can the planet provide enough food when all 10 billion of us eat like the First World does today?
- Natural Resource Depletion**.** Can a world with 10 billion people have enough material to house everyone, enough fuel to heat all the houses, and enough food to feed everyone?
Population Pyramids
- Graphical way to visualize the population structure of a country or place as well as the gender and age distribution of the population
General Principles:
- Males are always on the left of the pyramid and females are on the right
- Each bar is an age cohort, generally made up of five-year sets
- The origin (0-value) of each bar graph is the center and increases in value as you move left or right outward from the center
- A gap in data for both males and females is likely a sign of past war inside that country, epidemic disease, or famine.
- The general shape of the pyramid is reveals the character of the country, state, province, or city that is being diagrammed.
- increased mortality from disease and old age causes significant declines in the elder population, causing the top to shrink
- Population density is calculated in two main ways. * Arithmetic density is the number of people per square unit of land * Physiologic density is the number of people per square unit of farmland * Important in understanding the geography of countries where the amount of arable land is limited
- The population center of a country is found by averaging the spatial weight of population across the country.
- Overpopulation is a major concern both in resource-poor regions and across the globe. * Nonrenewable energy sources will be depleted if conservation efforts and population control methods are not mandated by governments * Alleviating concerns over decreasing amounts of personal space
Migration
- Migrants are generally those who voluntarily move from location to location.
- Many countries experience internal migrations that significantly change the countries’ population distributions. * Interregional, or internal, migrants: those who move from one region of the country to another * Transnational migration: occurs when migrants move from one country to another. * Forced migration: people may be taken or coerced from their homes for forced labor through human trafficking or enslavement * Undocumented immigrants: people who come seeking refuge or employment opportunities but do not have government authorization * Amnesty programs: allow undocumented immigrants the opportunity to apply for official status or citizenship without facing arrest or deportation * Step migration: occurs when people move up in a hierarchy of locations, with each move to a more advantageous or economically prosperous place * Chain migration: occurs when a pioneering individual or group settles in a new place, establishing a new migrant foothold. * Life-course changes: when people move because of major changes in the course of their lives.
Push and Pull Factors
- Push factors are specific things about the rural agricultural landscape and livelihood that force people off the farm * (ex: armed conflict, environmental pollution, increased land costs)
- Pull factors are specific things about cities that draw people to the urban landscape * (ex: job opportunities, medical care, education, service access, entertainment)
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