Population Pressure and Cultural Adjustment

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Demography, Sociology
Cover of the book Population Pressure and Cultural Adjustment by Virginia Deane Abernethy, Taylor and Francis
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Virginia Deane Abernethy ISBN: 9781351298780
Publisher: Taylor and Francis Publication: April 17, 2018
Imprint: Routledge Language: English
Author: Virginia Deane Abernethy
ISBN: 9781351298780
Publisher: Taylor and Francis
Publication: April 17, 2018
Imprint: Routledge
Language: English

Integrating research from anthropology, biology, and history, this provocative, brilliant book proposes a theory of demographic equilibrium. The author's hypothesis is that human beings, like many other species, are able to adjust their population numbers to the carrying capacity of the environment. Abernethy points out that in response to perception of scarcity or abundance of resources, culturally mediated values, beliefs and behavioral patterns are modified in ways that can either raise or lower rates of population growth. Abernethy in this way moves beyond the ideological debates that have sundered the field of policy and population. In real world time and space, cultural adjustments that balance population and resources are made over a long stretch in relatively stable or known environments. These adjustments also operate in processes that involve technological advances that appear to increase carrying capacity, and these usually act to support and underwrite population growth in any given area. In her new introduction to this first paperback edition, Abernethy shows how many of the cultural changes the book predicted in 1979 have come to pass. She details a complex of behaviors that favor single life-styles or small family size that have contributed to low fertility rates among native-born Americans while fertility rates among immigrants continue to climb. Population Pressure and Cultural Adjustment is not simply a theoretical slogan, but discusses a rich set of different cultural situations where this homeostatic process has been disrupted or aborted. Often, disruption occurs after the infusion of foreign value systems as well as new forms of technological innovation, or when highly permeable social boundaries result in the importation of resources for which the limits and consequences are not fully appreciated by the host population. This work will inevitably be controversial because of its implications for the limits as well as the potential of public policy in both advanced and underdeveloped societies.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Integrating research from anthropology, biology, and history, this provocative, brilliant book proposes a theory of demographic equilibrium. The author's hypothesis is that human beings, like many other species, are able to adjust their population numbers to the carrying capacity of the environment. Abernethy points out that in response to perception of scarcity or abundance of resources, culturally mediated values, beliefs and behavioral patterns are modified in ways that can either raise or lower rates of population growth. Abernethy in this way moves beyond the ideological debates that have sundered the field of policy and population. In real world time and space, cultural adjustments that balance population and resources are made over a long stretch in relatively stable or known environments. These adjustments also operate in processes that involve technological advances that appear to increase carrying capacity, and these usually act to support and underwrite population growth in any given area. In her new introduction to this first paperback edition, Abernethy shows how many of the cultural changes the book predicted in 1979 have come to pass. She details a complex of behaviors that favor single life-styles or small family size that have contributed to low fertility rates among native-born Americans while fertility rates among immigrants continue to climb. Population Pressure and Cultural Adjustment is not simply a theoretical slogan, but discusses a rich set of different cultural situations where this homeostatic process has been disrupted or aborted. Often, disruption occurs after the infusion of foreign value systems as well as new forms of technological innovation, or when highly permeable social boundaries result in the importation of resources for which the limits and consequences are not fully appreciated by the host population. This work will inevitably be controversial because of its implications for the limits as well as the potential of public policy in both advanced and underdeveloped societies.

More books from Taylor and Francis

Cover of the book Corruption and Organized Crime in Europe by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book How to Use an Interactive Whiteboard Really Effectively in your Secondary Classroom by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Informer 001 by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book The Election of the Century: The 2000 Election and What it Tells Us About American Politics in the New Millennium by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Stillborn Crusade by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Learning ICT with Maths by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Islam in Post-Soviet Russia by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Decolonization by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book God and Nature in the Thought of Margaret Cavendish by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book The Practices of Literary Translation by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Maturity and Modernity by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Emperor Constantine by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Out in Sport by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book Strategic Planning and Decision-Making for Public and Non-Profit Organizations by Virginia Deane Abernethy
Cover of the book The Nutritionist by Virginia Deane Abernethy
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy