"World population" Essays and Research Papers

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    World Without Mosquitoes

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    benefit is that more lives will be saved and will no longer be infected by the diseases. However‚ the downside to this issue is that it would add to the increase in human population. Admittedly‚ the death and infection of humans for many years may be tragic but in the obvious sense it is nature’s way of regulating its population. The research paper wants to point out that eradicating mosquitoes would not have serious consequences for ecosystems. Some scientists think that the

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    The One-Child Policy in China By: Jessie Corbett Period 6 / 7 November 2009 China’s population has topped the charts for decades‚ containing over a fifth of the world population‚[1] outpacing the rest of the world in technology and arts. That is‚ until recent years when the “One-Child Policy” was issued in 1979 in order to alleviate social‚ economic‚ and environmental problems in China. The “One-Child Policy” has three main objectives: to bolster hindered marriage and hindered child bearing

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    Reduction in the fertility as a population policy is necessary to maintain social stability. Discuss with reference to developing countries. Fertility refers to the number of children a woman has on average during the years she can reproduce. Social stability is where there’s social solidarity between the people and they work together to make society better. The reduction in the fertility as a population control policy is necessary to maintain social stability. However there are other policies

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    Increasing importance has been placed upon population and population growth over the course of the past few centuries. Scientists are frenetically searching for the solution to this issue‚ and their outcomes are bleak. They are telling the world that if population growth does not slow‚ the earth will swell to a capacity too large to sustain itself and the conclusion will be apocalyptic. Explanations are numerous‚ however viable solutions are difficult to find. Adherents to the Malthusian theory

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    Population Problems in India

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    In the early 80s‚ the Environmental Protection Agency was founded and spearheaded massive cleanup efforts to improve the environment. In the 80s‚ the Chernobyl disaster‚ along with several other worldwide incidents‚ sparked further reform. In 1987‚ world leaders signed the Montreal Pact‚ promising to support the environmental cause. The same year‚ reports on ozone layer depletion served to bring about the ban of aerosols by the 90s. When George W. Bush was elected president in 2001‚ however‚ environmental

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    Throughout the world and throughout history. The Young has always outnumbered the Elderly. However this is changing. Rapidly. The World is now witnessing a tremendous change in the ratios of elderly to the young. Over the next 40 years‚ the population of people aged >60 will grow by 1 billion to 2 billion. How does the fewer young support the high ratios of elderly? As they grow older‚ they are likely to be less productive due to health issues. How would the world economy cope with less money

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    Population Change

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    the pattern of population change in the UK? There are many different components that all add together for the reason why population does change in a specific location. This change is considered ‘dynamic’ as it is constantly changing due to many factors that are always effecting the rate of population change. One of the biggest influences of population change would be the birth and death rates of an area. Birth/death rate is the total number of births/deaths per 1‚000 of a population in a year. The

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    Population Explosion

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    POPULATION EXPLOSION INTRODUCTION: Population explosion is condition where an organisms numbers exceeds carrying capacity of its habitat.It is a curse and is damaging to the development of the country and its society.The developing countries already facing lack in their resourses‚and with the rapidly increasing population‚the resourses available per person ‚further leading to increased poverty‚malnutrition and other large population related problems. The literal meaning of population is “the

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    that high levels of educational achievement were associated with more moderate rates of population growth‚ suggesting that important opportunities for alleviating population pressures might be found in ensuring greater access to education‚ particularly for females. The ensuing public policy debate has prompted an examination of how education affects the birth rate. The explosive growth of the human population in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries was the result of a historically unprecedented

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