Dictionary Definition
demographer n : a scientist who studies the
growth and density of populations and their vital statistics [syn:
demographist,
population
scientist]
User Contributed Dictionary
Translations
- French: démographe
- Hebrew: דמוגרף (demograf) , דמוגרפית (demografit)
Extensive Definition
Demography is the statistical study of all
populations. It can
be a very general science that can be applied to any kind of
dynamic population, that is, one that changes over time or space
(see population
dynamics). It encompasses the study of the size, structure and
distribution of populations, and spatial and/or temporal changes in
them in response to birth,
death, migration
and aging.
Human demography is the most well known
discipline of demography, and typically what people refer to when
using the term demography. Demographic
analysis can be applied to whole societies or to groups defined
by criteria such as education, nationality, religion and ethnicity. In academia,
demography is often regarded as a branch of either anthropology, economics, or sociology. Formal demography
limits its object of study to the measurement of populations
processes, while the more broad field of social demography
population studies also analyze the relationships between economic,
social, cultural and biological processes influencing a
population.
The term demographics is often used
erroneously for demography, but refers rather to selected
population characteristics as used in government, marketing or opinion research,
or the demographic
profiles used in such research.
Data and methods
There are two methods of data collection: direct and indirect. Direct data come from vital statistics registries that track all births and deaths as well as certain changes in legal status such as marriage, divorce, and migration (registration of place of residence). In developed countries with good registration systems (such as the United States and much of Europe), registry statistics are the best method for estimating the number of births and deaths.The census is the other common direct
method of collecting demographic data. A census is usually
conducted by a national government and attempts to enumerate every
person in a country. However, in contrast to vital statistics data,
which are typically collected continuously and summarized on an
annual basis, censuses typically occur only every 10 years or so,
and thus are not usually the best source of data on births and
deaths. Analyses are conducted after a census to estimate how much
over or undercounting took place. Censuses do more than just count
people. They typically collect information about families or
households, as well as about such individual characteristics as
age, sex, marital status, literacy/education, employment status and
occupation, and geographical location. They may also collect data
on migration (or place of birth or of previous residence),
language, religion, nationality (or ethnicity or race), and
citizenship. In countries in which the vital registration system
may be incomplete, the censuses are also used as a direct source of
information about fertility and mortality; for example the censuses
of the People's Republic of China gather information on births and
deaths that occurred in the 18 months immediately preceding the
census.
Indirect methods of data collections are required
in countries where full data are not available, such as is the case
in much of the developing world. One of these techniques is the
sister method, where survey researchers ask women how many of their
sisters have died or had children and at what age. With these
surveys, researchers can then indirectly estimate birth or death
rates for the entire population. Other indirect methods include
asking people about siblings, parents, and children.
There are a variety of demographic methods for
modeling population processes. They include models
of mortality (including the life table,
Gompertz
models,
hazards models,
Cox proportional hazards models, multiple
decrement life tables, Brass
relational logits), fertility (Hernes
model, Coale-Trussell
models, parity
progression ratios), marriage (Singulate Mean at Marriage,
Page
model), disability (Sullivan's
method, multistate
life tables), population
projections (Lee
Carter, the Leslie
Matrix), and population
momentum (Keyfitz).
Important concepts
Important concepts in demography include:- The crude birth rate, the annual number of live births per 1000 people.
- The general fertility rate, the annual number of live births per 1000 women of childbearing age (often taken to be from 15 to 49 years old, but sometimes from 15 to 44).
- age-specific fertility rates, the annual number of live births per 1000 women in particular age groups (usually age 15-19, 20-24 etc.)
- The crude death rate, the annual number of deaths per 1000 people.
- The infant mortality rate, the annual number of deaths of children less than 1 year old per 1000 live births.
- The expectation of life (or life expectancy), the number of years which an individual at a given age could expect to live at present mortality levels.
- The total fertility rate, the number of live births per woman completing her reproductive life, if her childbearing at each age reflected current age-specific fertility rates.
- The gross reproduction rate, the number of daughters who would be born to a woman completing her reproductive life at current age-specific fertility rates.
- The net reproduction ratio is the expected number of daughters, per newborn prospective mother, who may or may not survive to and through the ages of childbearing.
Note that the crude death rate as defined above
and applied to a whole population can give a misleading impression.
For example, the number of deaths per 1000 people can be higher for
developed nations than in less-developed countries, despite
standards of health being better in developed countries. This is
because developed countries have relatively more older people, who
are more likely to die in a given year, so that the overall
mortality rate can be higher even if the mortality rate at any
given age is lower. A more complete picture of mortality is given
by a life
table which summarises mortality separately at each age. A life
table is necessary to give a good estimate of life
expectancy.
The fertility rates can also give a misleading
impression that a population is growing faster than it in fact is,
because measurement of fertility rates only involves the
reproductive rate of women, and does not adjust for the sex ratio.
For example, if a population has a total fertility rate of 4.0 but
the sex ratio is 66/34 (twice as many men as women), this
population is actually growing at a slower natural increase rate
than would a population having a fertility rate of 3.0 and a sex
ratio of 50/50. This distortion is greatest in India and Myanmar, and is
present in China as well.
Basic demographic equation
Suppose that a country (or other entity) contains Populationt persons at time t. What is the size of the population at time t + 1 ?- Population_ = Population_t + Natural increase_t + Net migration_t
Natural increase from time t to t + 1:
- Natural increase_t = Births_t - Deaths_t
Net migration from time t to t + 1:
- Net migration_t = Immigration_t - Emigration_t
This basic equation can also be applied to
subpopulations. For example, the population size of ethnic groups
or nationalities within a given society or country is subject to
the same sources of change. However, when dealing with ethnic
groups, "net migration" might have to be subdivided into physical
migration and ethnic reidentification (assimilation).
Individuals who change their ethnic self-labels or whose ethnic
classification in government statistics changes over time may be
thought of as migrating or moving from one population subcategory
to another.
More generally, while the basic demographic
equation holds true by definition, in practice the recording and
counting of events (births, deaths, immigration, emigration) and
the enumeration of the total population size are subject to error.
So allowance needs to be made for error in the underlying
statistics when any accounting of population size or change is
made.
History
Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) is regarded as the "father of demography" for his economic analysis of social organization which produced the first scientific and theoretical work on population, development, and group dynamics. His Muqaddimah also laid the groundwork for his observation of the role of state, communication and propaganda in history.The Natural and Political Observations ... upon
the Bills of Mortality (1662) of John Graunt
contains a primitive form of life
table. Mathematicians, such as Edmond
Halley, developed the life table as the basis for life
insurance mathematics. Richard
Price was credited with the first textbook on life
contingencies published in 1771, followed later by Augustus
de Morgan, ‘On the Application of Probabilities to Life
Contingencies’, (1838).
At the end of the 18th century, Thomas
Malthus concluded that, if unchecked, populations would be
subject to exponential
growth. He feared that population growth would tend to outstrip
growth in food production, leading to ever increasing famine and
poverty (see Malthusian
catastrophe); he is seen as the intellectual father of ideas of
overpopulation
and the limits to growth. Later more sophisticated and realistic
models were presented by e.g. Benjamin
Gompertz and
Verhulst.
The demographic transition
Contrary to Malthus' predictions and in line with
his thoughts on moral restraint, natural population growth in most
developed countries has diminished to close to zero, without being
held in check by famine or lack of resources, as people in
developed nations have shown a tendency to have fewer children. The
fall in population growth has occurred despite large rises in life
expectancy in these countries. This pattern of population growth,
with slow (or no) growth in pre-industrial
societies, followed by fast growth as the society develops and
industrialises, followed by slow growth again as it becomes more
affluent, is known as the demographic
transition.
Similar trends are now becoming visible in ever
more developing countries, so that far from spiralling out of
control, world population growth is expected to slow markedly in
the next century, coming to an eventual standstill or even
declining. The change is likely to be accompanied by major shifts
in the proportion of world population in particular regions. The
United
Nations Population Division expects the absolute number of
infants and toddlers in the world to begin to fall by 2015, and the
number of children under 15 by 2025. The figure in this section
shows the latest (2004) UN projections of world population out to
the year 2150 (red = high, orange = medium, green = low). The UN
"medium" projection shows world population reaching an approximate
equilibrium at 9 billion by 2075. Working independently,
demographers at the
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria
expect world population to peak at 9 billion by 2070. Throughout
the 21st century, the average age of the population is likely to
continue to rise.
The science of population
Populations change through three processes: fertility, mortality, and migration. Fertility involves the number of children that women have and is to be contrasted with fecundity (a woman's childbearing potential). Mortality is the study of the causes, consequences, and measurement of processes affecting death to members of the population. Demographers most commonly study mortality using the Life Table, a statistical device which provides information about the mortality conditions (most notably the life expectancy) in the population. Migration refers to the movement of persons from an origin place to a destination place across some pre-defined, political boundary. Migration researchers do not designate movements 'migrations' unless they are somewhat permanent. Thus demographers do not consider tourists and travelers to be migrating. While demographers who study migration typically do so through census data on place of residence, indirect sources of data including tax forms and labor force surveys are also important.Demography is today widely taught in many
universities across the world, attracting students with initial
training in social sciences, statistics or health studies. Being at
the crossroads of several disciplines such as geography, economics, sociology or epidemiology, demography
offers tools to approach a large range of population issues by
combining a more technical quantitative approach that represents
the core of the discipline with many other methods borrowed from
social or other sciences. Demographic research is conducted in
universities, in research institutes as well as in statistical
departments and in several international agencies. Population
institutions are part of the Cicred
(International Committee for Coordination of Demographic Research)
network while most individual scientists engaged in demographic
research are members of the International Union for the Scientific
Study of Population – IUSSP or, in the United States, in the
Population Association of
America.
Notes
See also
- Demographics of present-day nations and states
- Biodemography
- Biodemography of human longevity
- Demographic analysis
- Linguistic demography
- Nurgaliev's law
- Religious demography
- Gompertz-Makeham law of mortality
- Important publications in demography
- Medieval demography
- Population
- Population geography
- Population statistics
- Reproductive health
- Sociology
- Social surveys: General Social Survey, ALLBUS, GSOEP, PSID, European Social Survey, World Values Survey, National Longitudinal Survey
Further reading
- Glad, John. 2008. Future Human Evolution: Eugenics in the Twenty-First Century. Hermitage Publishers, ISBN 1-55779-154-6 http://www.whatwemaybe.org/txt/txt0000/Glad.John.2008.FHE.Meisenberg-abridgement.en.pdf
- Preston, Samuel, Patrick Heuveline, and Michel Guillot. 2000. Demography: Measuring and Modeling Population Processes. Blackwell Publishing.
- Paul R. Ehrlich (1968), The Population Bomb Controversial Neo-Malthusianist pamphlet
- Leonid A. Gavrilov & Natalia S. Gavrilova (1991), The Biology of Life Span: A Quantitative Approach. New York: Harwood Academic Publisher, ISBN 3-7186-4983-7
- Phillip Longman (2004), The Empty Cradle: how falling birth rates threaten global prosperity and what to do about it
- Joe McFalls (2007), Population: A Lively Introduction, Population Reference Bureau http://prb.org/Publications/PopulationBulletins/2007/PopulationALivelyIntroduction.aspx
- Ben J. Wattenberg (2004), How the New Demography of Depopulation Will Shape Our Future. Chicago: R. Dee, ISBN 1-56663-606-X
- Andrey Korotayev, Artemy Malkov, & Daria Khaltourina (2006). Introduction to Social Macrodynamics: Compact Macromodels of the World System Growth. Moscow: URSS, ISBN 5-484-00414-4 http://urss.ru/cgi-bin/db.pl?cp=&page=Book&id=34250&lang=en&blang=en&list=14
External links
- Demographic mapping and reporting for the UK
- Demography at the University of Southampton
- PAA The Population Association of America is a society of professionals working in the population field. PAA members include demographers, sociologists, economists and public health professionals.
- Demography Demography is the official journal of the Population Association of America.
- International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) IIASA is a non-governmental research institution studying sustainability and the human dimensions of global change for the scientific community, policy makers and the public.
- Centre for Population Studies, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, the UK's largest research centre focusing on demography and reproductive health.
- Rivista Italiana di Economia Demografia e Statistica RIEDS, Italian Review of Economics Demography and Statistics, Sieds(in Italian, some articles are in English).
- Committee for International Cooperation in National Research in Demographyaims at developing cooperation amongst national population research centres, and encouraging new research
- Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research The MPIDR began its activities in October 1996, but it has already become one of the largest non-governmental research bodies in demography in the world.
- Population Studies a journal of demography.
- Online Journal Demographic Research A free, open access, expedited, peer-reviewed journal of the population sciences published regularly on the web.
- Historicalstatistics.org Links to historical demographic and economic statistics
- The Population Reference Bureau has two introduction to demography texts on line. "Population Handbook" and "Population: A Lively Introduction".
- Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan one of the oldest and most active demography research centers in the United States.
- Hopkins Population Center Hopkins Population Center was established in 1971 with a mandate to stimulate and facilitate interdisciplinary population research. It is the only NICHD funded center in a school of public health.
- Population Studies Center at the University of Pennsylvania since 1962 turning life into statistics.
- Department of Demography, University of California, Berkeley
- Département de démographie, Université de Montréal
- Department of Demography,Cedeplar, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil
- Institute National d'Etudes Démographiques French National Institute
- Population and Health graduate program Population and Health Graduate Program in the Dept of Population and Family Health Sciences at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
- Center for Demography and Ecology at the University of Wisconsin,Madison one of the leading centers of demographic research in the world.
- CensusScope U.S. Social Demography site containing data, charts, and color coded maps for country, state, county, and metropolitan geographies.
- PopulationData.net Information and maps about populations around the world. French, with Babelfish translation.
- Phillip Longman, New Statesman, 31 May 2004, "Everywhere, even in Africa, the world is running out of children"
- Ed Stephan's Timeline of Demography Highlights in the history of demography from 3800 BC to 2000 AD.
- United Nations Population Division Homepage(e.g. Population Estimates and Projections Data Online)
- UN 2004 population projections
- NationMasterNationMaster is a vast compilation of data from such sources as the CIA World Factbook, UN, and OECD.
- Java Simulation of Population Dynamics.
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