Environmental Management - Population Revision
Environmental Management - Population Revision
Environmental Management - Population Revision
Until the 1800s the world's population grew steadily but slowly for thousands of years.
In 1820 the world's population reached one billion.
150 years later, in the early 1970s, the world's population reached three billion.
In 1999, less than 30 years later, the population doubled to six billion.
The global rate of population growth is now very fast (rising by about one billion every 15 years).
Births - usually measured using the birth rate (number of live births per 1000 of the population).
Deaths - usually measured using the death rate (number of deaths per 1000 of the population) .
Migration - the movement of people in and out of an area.
Rate of change
Births and deaths are natural causes of population change. The difference between the birth rate and the
death rate of a country or place is called the natural increase, and you calculate the natural increase by
subtracting the death rate per 1000 population from the birth rate per 1000 population:
natural increase = birth rate - death rate
The rate of natural increase or growth rate of a population is given as a percentage, calculated by dividing
the natural increase by 10.
For example if the birth rate is 14 per 1000 population, and the death rate is 8 per 1000 population, then
growth rate = 14 - 8 = 6
That is 6 / 1000, which is equal to 0.6%.
Overpopulation is when there is not enough resources for the inhabitants in an area.
leads to famine, water and electricity shortages, increased unemployment.
Inevitably this
Under population is when there is more resources than inhabitants in an area. Surplus in food and water
results in wastes. Societal systems such as schools and hospitals will then not have enough demand to
run at a sustainable level. So the cost per capita for the service will increase. Additionally, there will be
less "working population" this has a negative impact on a countries economy and will lead to an increase
in taxation.
Optimum population is when there is enough resources for the number of inhabitants (population
demand for goods is equal to the supply)
Population distribution means the pattern of where people live. World population distribution is uneven.
Places which are sparsely populated contain few people. Places which are densely populated contain
many people. Sparsely populated places tend to be difficult places to live. These are usually places with
hostile environments e.g. Antarctica. Places which are densely populated are habitable environments e.g.
Europe.
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10
0.1
Canada
11
0.4
Bulgaria
14
-5
-0.5
LEDCs
Country
South Africa
25
15
10
Botswana
31
22
0.9
Zimbabwe
29
20
0.9
Have a look at the birth and death rates for Bulgaria. The birth rate is 9/1000 and death rate is 14/1000.
The birth rate is less than the death rate, which gives Bulgaria a declining population.
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Now look at the figures for South Africa. The birth rate is 25/1000 and death rate is 15/1000. South Africa
has an increasing population with a population-growth rate of 1%.
Stage one - the total population is low but it is balanced due to high birth rates and high death
rates.
Stage two - the total population is starting to rise as death rates start to fall due to improvements
in health care and sanitation but birth rates remain quite high.
Stage three - the total population is still rising rapidly, but the gap between birth and death rates
narrows due to fewer children needed to work in farming and the availability of contraception.
Now the natural increase is high.
Stage four - the total population is high, but it is balanced due to a low birth rate and a low death
rate. Birth control is widely available and there is a desire for smaller families.
Stage five The total population is high but going into decline due to an ageing population and a
continued desire for smaller families, with people opting to delay having children until later in
life.
As a country passes through the demographic transition model, the total population rises. Most LEDCs
are at stage 2 or 3 (with a growing population and a high natural increase). Most MEDCs are now at stage
four of the model and some such as Germany and Italy have entered stage 5.
Notice how as we move through the stages of the model, the gap between birth rate and death rate first
widens, then narrows. In stage 1 the two rates are balanced. In stage 2 they diverge, as the death rate
falls relative to the birth rate. In stage 3 they converge again, as the birth rate falls relative to the death
rate. Finally in stage 4 the death and birth rates are balanced again - but at a much lower level.
Limitations of the model
The demographic transition model has two limitations:
1. The model was developed after studying the experiences of countries in Western Europe and
North America. Conditions might be different for LEDCs in different parts of the world.
2. The original model doesn't take into account the fact that some countries now have a declining
population and a fifth stage. Most texts will now show this stage as it is relevant to an increasing
number of MEDCs in the 21st century.
Population can also be affected by disease and governmental policies.
In an address to the UN assembly in June 2001, President Festus Mogae summed up the situation by
saying:
"We are threatened with extinction. People are dying in chillingly high numbers. It is a crisis of the first
magnitude."
In response to this emergency, Botswana became the first African country to aim to provide antiretroviral
drugs to all its needy citizens. The success of this treatment programme has made Botswana an example
for other African nations to follow. Yet even with universal treatment access, the country continues to
suffer greatly from AIDS. If it is ever to defeat the epidemic, Botswana must find a way to halt the spread
of HIV.
The birth of MASA (new dawn)
By January 2002, the aim was to provide medication during the coming year to 19,000 of the 110,000
infected people whom it was considered could benefit.
These included,
Although IUDs, sterilisation, and abortion (legal in China) are China's most popular forms of birth control,
over the past few years, China has provided more education and support for alternative birth control
methods.
Statistically, China's total fertility rate (the number of births per woman) is 1.7, much higher than slowlydeclining Germany at 1.4 but lower than the U.S. at 2.1 (2.1 births per woman is the replacement level of
fertility, representing a stable population, exclusive of migration).
In 2007, there were reports that in the southwestern Guangxi Autonomous Region of China, officials
were forcing pregnant women without permission to give birth to have abortions and levying steep fines
on families violating the law. As a result, riots broke out and some may have been killed, including
population control officials.
The Future of China's One Child Law
China's eleventh Five-Year Plan Period is from 2006 to 2010. Minister of the State Commission of
Population and Family Planning Zhang Weiqing confirmed in early 2006 that China's one child policy is
consistent with the nation's plan for population growth and would continue indefinitely. He denied
rumors that the policy become less stringent to permit a second child.
People are unevenly distributed around the world. The difference in distribution is measured by
comparing population density - that is, the number of people per square kilometre (km).
Population density is determined less by economic development than by environmental factors, which
make an area more or less attractive to settlers.
The way in which people are spread across a given area is known as population distribution.
Geographers study population distribution patterns at different scales: local, regional, national, and
global.
Patterns of population distribution tend to be uneven. For example, in Italy there are more people living
in the north than the south.
Population density
Population density is the average number of people per square kilometre. It is a way of measuring
population distribution. It shows whether an area is sparsely or densely populated. Population density is
calculated using the following formula:
High Density
Low Density
Relief
(shape and height of land)
Low land which is flat e.g. Ganges High land that is mountainous
Valley in India
e.g. Himalayas
Resources
Areas rich in resources (e.g. coal, oil, Areas with few resources tend to
wood, fishing etc.) tend to densely be sparsely populated e.g. The
populated e.g. Western Europe
Sahel
Climate
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Human Factors
High Density
Low Density
Political
Social
Economic
Looking at the population structure of a place shows how the population is divided up between
Population structure is usually shown using a population pyramid. A population pyramid can be drawn
up for a whole country or an individual town, city or village.
age
groups,
with
the
numbers
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Now
compare
the
UK
population
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The shape of a population pyramid is very important and can tell us a lot about the people living
in a particular country or place.
The shape of a population pyramid gives us information about birth and death rates as well as
life expectancy.
A population pyramid tells us how many dependants there are living in an area. There are two
groups of dependants; young dependants (aged below 15) and elderly dependants (aged over
65).
Those of working age are classed as economically active. Dependants rely upon the economically
active for economic support.
Many LEDCs have a high number of young dependants, whilst many MEDCs have a growing
number of elderly dependants.
A population pyramid that is very triangular (eg Mozambique in 2000) illustrates a population
with a high number of young dependants and a low life expectancy.
A population pyramid that has fairly straight sides (more like a barrel) illustrates a population
with a falling birth rate and a rising life expectancy.
Over time, as a country develops, the shape of its population pyramid changes from a triangular
shape to a barrel-like shape with straighter edges.
Places that are experiencing an ageing population and a very low birth rate may have a
population structure that looks a little like an upside-down pyramid.
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Migration
As the dynamics of a country changes as do the living conditions and quality of life. Similarly, economics
and politics also have a massive contribution to the standards of living in any particular country. The
movement of people from one place to another over time is called migration. This can happen within a
country, internal migration or between countries, international migration. Connected to this are the
reasons for the move in the first place. Some migrations happen through a conscious decision to move to
improve the standard of living, voluntary migration. In contrast, forced migration, tends to occur after
large natural disasters or conflict.
Nevertheless all types of migration involve push and pull factors. These are simply reasons that people
move from an area, push factors and why people move to a particular area, pull factors. Pull factors
often give stability or security whilst push factors contribute to instability or insecurity. Every country has
pull factors and push factors.
Pull Factors
Lack of food
Poor housing
Many trained doctors and nurses provide a reliable
health care system.
Poor education facilities
More often than not, the conditions that migrants live in after they have moved are not as they had
expected them to be. Sometimes there are bureaucratic problems in getting work due to visas, language
barriers, racial tensions, lack of housing facilities and so on.
Use your own text books and notes to look at particular internal and international migratory events.
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