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Sub-replacement fertility

World population data questions

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AP Human Geography Due Date Go to my website for the 2015 World Population Data Sheet Use the highlights at the beginning of the report to answer the first 10 questions What are the changes in the most populous countries from 2015 to 2050? What regions have the highest and lowest fertility rates? What does this mean for that region? Analyze Pop Clock data?.what are 3 stats that stand out to you? Explain why. How does the increasing age of marriage affect the population stats? What are some possible large purchases in the given countries that have seen significant increase in decisions by women? Look family planning, what country saw the highest growth? What may have happened in 2003 that changed that number significantly? (educated guess here or research that country)

The Cultural Landscape (Rubenstein) Chapter 2 review questions

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?PAGE ? ?PAGE ?1? AP Human Geography Name___________________ Chapter 2 Period__________________ Population 1. How do demographers look at the world?s population? 2. What issues will the study of population help one understand more thoroughly? Case Study / Population Growth in India 3. Why does the Indian government hope that families similar to the Phataks have fewer children in the future? 4. How do most of the people in India live, and why is this a concern when dealing with population issues? 5. What is the relationship between population growth and economic growth? How is India doing with respect to this relationship? 6. Why is the study of population critical?

CHANGES IN POPULATIONS

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Changes in Population What is a Population? ? A group of organisms of the same species ? living in the same habitat ? at the same time ? where they can freely interbreed How Can Populations Change MortalityNatality (Fertility) Immigration & Emigration Fertility ? Crude Birth Rate (CBR) live births per 1,000 people ? Total Fertility Rate (TFR) avg. number of children born to a woman ? Life Expectancy ? number of years an infant can expect to live ? Natural Increase Rate (NIR) ?Excess of births over deaths results in natural increase ?Excess of deaths over births results in natural decrease Mortality ? Crude Death Rate (CDR) deaths per 1,000 people ? Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) ? number of children who die before their first birthday

Living in the Environment 16th Ed. : Ch.6 Key Terms

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Chapter 6 age structure the distribution of males and females among age groups in a population?in this case, the world population. birth rate, or crude birth rate the number of live births per 1,000 people in a population in a given year cultural carrying capacity This would be an optimum level that would allow most people to live in reasonable comfort and freedom without impairing the ability of the planet to sustain future generations. death rate, or crude death rate the number of deaths per 1,000 people in a population in a given year demographic transition as countries become industrialized, first their death rates and then their birth rates decline. family planning

AP Hug chapter 2 test review

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The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography, 10e (Rubenstein) Chapter 2 Population 1) One important feature of the world's population with the most significant future implications is that A) the natural increase rate is larger every year. B) there are fewer people in the world now than at the peak in the middle of the twentieth century. C) the most rapid growth is occurring in the less developed countries. D) people are uniformly distributed across Earth. E) the less developed countries have the highest combined crude death rate. 2) Geographers define overpopulation as A) too many people in the world. B) too many people compared to resources. C) too many people in a region. D) all of the above E) A and C
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