Demography/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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imported>Martin Baldwin-Edwards (corrected related articles links) |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
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Revision as of 18:58, 25 December 2008
- See also changes related to Demography, or pages that link to Demography or to this page or whose text contains "Demography".
- U.S. Demographic History [r]: Historic trends in population growth, geographical distribution by states and urban-rural, internal migration, and components of change (births, deaths, immigration), as well as race and ethnicity, and population policy as they relate to the United States. [e]
- Malthusianism [r]: A theory in demography which holds that population expands faster than food supplies and famine will result unless steps are taken to reduce population growth. [e]
- Epidemiology [r]: The branch of demography that studies patterns of disease in human or animal populations. [e]
- Fertility (demography) [r]: The demographic analysis of having babies. [e]
- Morbidity [r]: The rate of illness with a common cause, in a specified population, over a specified period of time [e]
- Mortality (demography) [r]: Mortality is the branch of demography that studies rates and causes of deaths for a population as a whole. [e]
- Infant mortality [r]: A concept in demography that estimates the "rate of deaths occurring in the first year of life". [e]
- Life expectancy [r]: A concept in demography that measures the mean number of years of life for babies born in a specified year. [e]
- Demographic transition [r]: The theory that societies progress from a premodern regime of high fertility and high mortality to a postmodern regime of low fertility and low mortality. [e]