Sunday, December 18, 2016
POPULATION: An Introduction to Concepts and Issues BY John R. Weeks
POPULATION
An Introduction to Concepts and Issues
By
John R. Weeks
John R. Weeks’s POPULATION introduces students to population issues, concepts, and theories by encompassing the entire field of demography, including both principle and practice. From fertility and mortality rates to agricultural production and urbanization, Weeks consistently engages students through compelling writing and comprehensive explication. And with intriguing essays and online resources, Weeks’s text gives students their best opportunity to truly master core demographic concepts.
Demographics class just got a lot more interesting. POPULATION doesn't just give you the information; it shows you how to use it. From the debate over how to rebuild the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina to what should be done about Social Security and Medicare, POPULATION lets you apply the research yourself. Plus, POPULATION makes studying for the test easier than ever with its built-in study aides.
CONTENTSPART ONE A DEMOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVECHAPTER 1 Introduction to Demography 1
CHAPTER 2 Global Population Trends 30
CHAPTER 3 Demographic Perspectives 66
CHAPTER 4 Demographic Data 108
PART TWO: POPULATION PROCESSESCHAPTER 5 The Health and Mortality Transition 146
CHAPTER 6 The Fertility Transition 198
CHAPTER 7 The Migration Transition 262
PART THREE: POPULATION STRUCTURE AND CHARACTERISTICSCHAPTER 8 The Age Transition 306
CHAPTER 9 The Urban Transition 352
CHAPTER 10 The Family and Household Transition 391
PART FOUR: USING THE DEMOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVECHAPTER 11 Population and the Environment 439
CHAPTER 12 Coping with Demographic Change 487
APPENDIX Population Data for the World, Keyed to Figure 2.1 539
GLOSSARY 545
BIBLIOGRAPHY 559
INDEXES 595
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD EBOOK
File Type: PDF ( ebook ) ( .pdf )
CONTENTSPART ONE A DEMOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVECHAPTER 1 Introduction to Demography 1
CHAPTER 2 Global Population Trends 30
CHAPTER 3 Demographic Perspectives 66
CHAPTER 4 Demographic Data 108
PART TWO: POPULATION PROCESSESCHAPTER 5 The Health and Mortality Transition 146
CHAPTER 6 The Fertility Transition 198
CHAPTER 7 The Migration Transition 262
PART THREE: POPULATION STRUCTURE AND CHARACTERISTICSCHAPTER 8 The Age Transition 306
CHAPTER 9 The Urban Transition 352
CHAPTER 10 The Family and Household Transition 391
PART FOUR: USING THE DEMOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVECHAPTER 11 Population and the Environment 439
CHAPTER 12 Coping with Demographic Change 487
APPENDIX Population Data for the World, Keyed to Figure 2.1 539
GLOSSARY 545
BIBLIOGRAPHY 559
INDEXES 595
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD EBOOK
File Type: PDF ( ebook ) ( .pdf )
Common terms and phrases
abortion African Americans age structure American areas Asia average baby baby boom birth rate Canada Ce usage Learning Cengage Learning century ChapterChina cities cohort contraceptio copieddeath rates demographic transition developed nations developing countries discussed diseaseeconomic development especially estimated Europe European expectancy females fertility decline fertility levels fertility rate fertility transition Figure global higher human immigrants impact important income increase labor force Learning All Rights less developed living lower malesMalthus marriage married Mexico migration million Nations Population Division number of children pattern percent person population growth production projectedreproductive Rights Reserve rural scanned social society sub-Saharan Africa suppressed Survey Table theory third party content tion U.S. Census Bureau United Nations United Nations Population urban transition usage Learning whole women World Population young youth bulge
About the author
John R. Weeks is Professor of Geography in the Geography Department at San Diego State University. His current research includes applications of remote sensing and GIS to analyze fertility in Arab nations, demography of the U.S.-Mexico border region, and geodemography of crime.
Bibliographic information
Title | Population: An Introduction to Concepts and Issues |
Author | John R. Weeks |
Edition | 11, illustrated |
Publisher | Cengage Learning, 2011 |
ISBN | 1111185972, 9781111185978 |
Length | 640 pages |
Subjects |
› Family & Relationships / Family Relationships |
THE NEW URBAN SOCIOLOGY Mark Gottdiener & Ray Hutchison
THE NEW URBAN SOCIOLOGY
(Fourth Edition)
By
Mark Gottdiener
University at Buffalo
Ray Hutchison
University of Wisconsin–Green Bay
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD .PDF HERE
About the author (2010)
Mark Gottdiener is professor of sociology at SUNY-Buffalo and the recipient of the 2011 Robert and Helen Lynd Lifetime Achievement Award. He is the author of numerous books, including The Theming of America; Las Vegas: The Social Production of an All-American City; New Forms of Consumption: Consumer, Culture, and Commodification; Postmodern Semiotics; and The Social Production of Urban Space.
Ray Hutchison is professor of sociology and chair of urban and regional studies at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. He is series editor of Research in Urban Sociology and senior editor of the forthcoming three-volume Encyclopedia of Urban Studies.
Ray Hutchison is professor of sociology and chair of urban and regional studies at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. He is series editor of Research in Urban Sociology and senior editor of the forthcoming three-volume Encyclopedia of Urban Studies.
Bibliographic information
Title | The New Urban Sociology |
Authors | Mark Gottdiener, Ray Hutchison |
Publisher | Westview Press, 2010 |
ISBN | 0813391873, 9780813391878 |
Length | 457 pages |
Subjects |
› › Political Science / Public Policy / City Planning & Urban Development Social Science / General Social Science / Social Classes Social Science / Sociology / General Social Science / Sociology / Urban |
Urban Sociology: Images and Structure by William G. Flanagan
Urban Sociology
Images and Structure
The fifth edition of this text presents a balanced review of the ecological arguments that the urban arena produces unique experiential and urban-based cultural effects while exploring the broader political and economic contexts that produce and modify the urban environment. In addition to examining the urban dimensions of such topics as community formation and continuity, minority and majority dynamics, ethnic experience, poverty, power, and crime, it provides an analysis of the spatial distribution of population and resources with regard to the metropolitanization of the urban form, and the interaction between urban concentration and development and underdevelopment. From a first chapter that begins with a discussion of some of the more micrological features of the urban experience, the text focuses on the significance of the more macrological cultural, social organizational, and political dimensions of urban change, in an historical span that includes the first cities and concludes with an exploration of the implications of cyberspace, transnationalism, and global terrorism for the future of urban sociology. While the work focuses primarily on the North American case, its analytical and integrated discussion makes it applicable to urban societies in general.
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD PDF HERE
file type: ( .pdf )
file type: ( .pdf )
About the author (2010)
William G. Flanagan is professor of sociology at Coe College.
Bibliographic information
Title | Urban Sociology: Images and Structure |
Author | William George Flanagan |
Edition | revised |
Publisher | Rowman & Littlefield, 2010 |
ISBN | 0742561755, 9780742561755 |
Length | 445 pages |
Subjects |
› › Social Science / Sociology / Urban |
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