Visualizing Environmental Science

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Average number of children

born/Indian woman
Percentage of Indian women

using contraceptives

Contraceptive use

1980198
5

(^199019952000200520102011)
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Number of
children
born
Ye a r
Based on data from World Bank World Development Indicators.


7


Human Population


Change and the


Environment


INDIA’S POPULATION PRESSURES

I


ndia is the world’s second most populous nation, with
a mid-2011 population of 1.24 billion. In the 1950s,
it became the first country to establish government-
sponsored family planning. India did not experience
immediate results from its efforts to control population
growth, in part because of the diverse cultures, religions,
and customs in different regions
of the country. Indians speak 15 main languages and more
than 700 dialects, which makes communicating
a program of family planning education difficult.
In recent years, India has attempted to integrate
economic development and family planning projects.
Adult literacy and population
education programs have
been combined. Multimedia
advertisements and education
promote voluntary birth
control, and contraceptives
are more available. India has
emphasized that improving
health services lowers infant
and child mortality rates. These
efforts have had an effect: The
average number of children
born per Indian woman
declined from 4.7 in 1980 to 2.6
in 2011 (see graph).
Despite these gains, population pressure has
contributed to the deterioration of India’s environment in
the past few decades, and 76 percent of Indians live below
the official poverty level (less than US $2 a day). India’s
large population exacerbates its poverty, environmental
degradation, and economic underdevelopment.

158

Interpreting Data Question
Between 1985 and 2008, what was
the change in contraceptive use?
the change in the birth rate? graphingactivity
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