POLD89H3 Lecture Notes - Demographic Transition, Resource Depletion

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Old governance vs. new governance: the: population and demographics. At the heart of most ecological issues, among others, is the question of population. Three central problems arise from the pressures of population growth: dwindling food supply. The first was highlighted by malthus: the dwindling of world food supplies. The possibility of starvation is not the only malthusian outcome. If population growth strains food resources, then malnutrition will continue to limit the mental and physical development of children and the energies and abilities of adults in other words, the quality of the population: relative deprivation. The second problem is discontent resulting from deprivation. This pertains to the resentment felt among people who find themselves on the short end of an inequitable distribution of resources (including food) brought about by uneven patterns of population growth: environmental decay. The third problem, perhaps most emphasized, is ecological. Increases in population inevitably increase the demands for natural resources, thus generating ever greater environmental decay.

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