Chapter 6: Human Population

Ace your homework & exams now with Quizwiz!

Family Planning

A social factor of population where designing a well-thought plan with someone about what you want your family to be like positively influences fertility rates

Poverty

A social factor of population where under developed nations have a strong correlation with increased fertility rates and generally have larger populations

Woman's Empowerment

A social factor of population where women receive education that positively influence fertility rates

Summation

Affluent nations cannot continue to consume at the current rate because resources won't be able to sustain at those levels of consumption U.S top dog in weaponry NOT economics

Human Population

Approaching 7 billion and growing at a tremendous rate (2.5 people/second). Doubling faster due to exponential growth

Per Capita Income

Creates an impact on the environment (generally negative) because the rich use more natural resources (larger footprint), poverty correlates with increased fertility rates and impact, and overpopulation increase potential conflict over natural resources

Post-Industrial Stage

Final stage of the demographic transition model, in which both birth and death rates have fallen to a low level (LOW/STABLE)

Pre-Industrial Stage

First stage of the demographic transition model, characterized by conditions that defined most of human history; both death rates and birth rates are high (HIGH/STABLE)

IPAT Model (I=P*A*T)

Formula that represents how humans's total impact on the environment results from the interaction( I ) among population (P), affluence(A), and technology(T)

Technology

Helps us reduce emissions, pollution, waste, and renewable energy, and exploit natural resources efficiently. Not all good or all bad

Populations Births, Deaths, Immigration, and Emigration

How many people in a community were born, died, came in, or left a particular area

Population Density

How the population is dispersed (EX: Clustered near resources)

Demographic Transition

Model of economic and cultural change that explains the declining death rates and birth rates that occurred in Western nations as they became industrialized

Replacement Fertility

Rate a female's children replace them (2.1 - 2 Children to each mother & father) that keeps the size of a population stable. Anything above is growth and below is decline

Growth Rate

Reacher 1 billion in 1800, and it took only 2 years to reach 7 billion (1 billion/12 years). Rate at 2.1%. Population will double in 33 years at that rate (J-Curve)

Transitional Stage

Second stage of the demographic transition model, characterized by declining death rates but continued high birth rates (HIGH=POPULATION GROWTH)

Population Growth

Technological advances, improved sanitation, medical advances, and increased agricultural output are the four major factors influencing _________

Population Size

The actual number of people (Organisms)

Total Fertility Rate

The average number of children born per female member of a population during her lifetime Rapid increase is a pyramid, Decline is a lightbulb, and stable is a narrow pyramid

Life Expectancy

The average time a person can expect to live

Population Sex

The ratio of male to female (more females results in more population) About 100 Females to 106 Males

Demography

The study of statistical change in human populations (characteristics) Includes population size, density, age, sex, births, deaths, immigration, emigration, and total fertility rate

Industrial Stage

Third stage of the demographic transition model, characterized by falling birth rates that close the gap with falling death rates (LOW=REDUCED POPULATION GROWTH)

Affluence

Wealthier nations/people utilize more resources for consumer goods/lifestyle

Population Age

What is the general % of old, young, and reproductive people in a population

Population Growth Problems

Where will we put an extra 7 billion people? Not enough land for crops (food), or housing. Will we have enough clean water for agriculture and/or drinking (droughts in Midwest getting more consistant)


Related study sets

Ch 51: Assessment and Management of Patients With Diabetes Mellitus

View Set

Study Guide Fundamentals Quiz #4

View Set

Cable Connectivity Common Issues

View Set