Predicting the shape of our future populations is vital for installing the infrastructure, welfare, and provisions necessary for society to survive. There are many opportunities and challenges that will come with the changes in our populations over the 21st century. In this new addition to the 21st Century Challenges series, Sarah Harper works to dispel myths such as the fear of unstoppable global growth resulting in a population explosion, or that climate change will lead to the mass movement of environmental refugees; and instead considers the future shape of our populations in light of demographic trends in fertility, mortality, and migration, and their national and global impact. How Population Change Will Transform Our World looks at population trends by region to highlight the key issues facing us in the coming decades, including the demographic inertia in Europe, demographic dividend in Asia, high fertility and mortality in Africa, the youth bulge in the Middle East, and the balancing act of migration in the Americas. Harper concludes with an analysis of global challenges we must plan for such as the impact of climate change and urbanization, and the difficulty of feeding 10 billion people, and considers ways in which we can prepare for, and mitigate against, these challenges.
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Product Details
Weight: 370g
Dimensions: 145 x 198mm
Publication Date: 28 Jul 2016
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780198784098
About Sarah Harper
Sarah Harper (MA (Cantab.) Cambridge; DPhil (Oxon) Oxford) is Professor of Gerontology at Oxford University and Director of the Oxford Institute of Ageing a multi-disciplinary research unit concerned with the implications of population ageing and director of the Clore Programme on Population-Environment Change. Her research concerns globalization and global ageing and the impact of population change in particular the implications at the global societal and individual level of the age-structural shift from predominantly young to predominantly older societies. She has authored edited and contributed to several books including Families in Ageing Societies (Editor OUP 2004) Ageing Societies: Myths Challenges and Opportunities (Hodder Arnold 2005) and Is the Planet Full? (Contributer OUP 2014). She is also the editor of the Journal of Population Ageing (Springer).