Population in History

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A01=D.E.C. Eversley
American Population Growth
Author_D.E.C. Eversley
Carlo M. Cipolla
Category=JHB
Category=JHBD
Crude Birth Rate
Crude Death Rate
Crude Marriage Rate
Crude Rate
D. E. C. Eversley
D. V. Glass
demographic transition theory
Distant Migrants
Eastern Flanders
Eighteenth
Eino Jutikkala
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Excess Male Mortality
family structure evolution
fertility determinants research
Finland Proper
Great Famine
Great Northern War
Gustaf Utterstr
Henry III
High Marriage Rate
historical demography
Infantile Mortality
J. Bourgeois-Pichat
J. Meuvret
J. Potter
K. H. Connell
Large Families
Legitimate Fertility
Local Migrants
Louis Henry
Lower Age Groups
Lower Age Groups
M. K. B. Beaton
Margaret Hilton
Medium Term Fluctuations
migration studies Europe
mortality patterns analysis
P. Deprez
Parish Registers
Peter Jimack
Pierre Goubert
Poll Tax Lists
quantitative population history studies
Systematic Sample Analysis
Van Werveke
W. Koellmann
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138530485
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Aug 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This large-scale comparative endeavor, complete in two volumes, reflects increasing concern with the population factor in economic and social change worldwide. Demographers, on their side, have been focusing on history. In response to this, Population in History represents the work of two practitioners that have begun to work together, using their combined approaches in an attempt to assess and account for population growth experienced by the West since the seventeenth century.

There is a long record of interest in the history of population. But the interest now displayed is likely to be both more persistent and far more fruitful in its consequences. New studies have been initiated in many countries. And because the studies are more informed and systematic than many of those of earlier periods, they are already provoking the further spread of research. A much more positive part is now also being played by national and international associations of historians and demographers. It is not unlikely that, within the next fifteen or twenty years, the main outlines of population change in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries will be firmly established for much of Europe.

Previous research has tended to appear in specialist journals and academic publications. This volume is intended to provide a more easily accessible publication. It has been thought appropriate to include some earlier work, both because of its intrinsic interest and because it provided the background and part of the stimulus to the later research. Of the twenty-seven contributions to this outstanding volume, seven are unabridged reprints of earlier work; the remaining contributions are either entirely new or represent substantial revisions of work published elsewhere.

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