Sociology Now, Census Update
WHAT DOES AMERICA THINK? 615 18.1 Confidence in Press These are actual survey data from the General Social Survey, 2004. As far ...
19 ■The Human Environment Being Born Dying Moving In, Moving Out Studying Immigration Population Composition ■Population Growth ...
ON AUGUST 23, 2005, the summer’s twelfth tropical depression formed over the Bahamas. Soon it was upgraded to a Category 1 hurri ...
The Human Environment Humans are a social species. We want—and need—to be around other people most of the time. People who go of ...
between menarche (the onset of menstruation) and menopause (the end of menstruation) they could give birth over 20 times (their ...
in the world (29.36). Most people cannot afford the expensive medications necessary to keep HIV from developing into AIDS, so th ...
Canada was second (214,600 new citizenships), followed by several European countries and Australia (OECD 2004). Over 46 million ...
2.At about the same time, Europeans transported over 11,000,000 East and West Africans to their New World colonies in North and ...
adjacent cities, as people seek bigger and better residences while staying “close to home.” A surprising percentage occur across ...
An influx of new immigrants, either internal or inter- national, can provide new talent for the community, but it also puts a st ...
immigrants help account for a less-constrictive pyramid than in some other wealthy countries (“As They Don’t Like It,” 2005). Po ...
In modern societies, most children survive to adulthood, so it is imprudent to give birth to more than you expect to raise. And, ...
In 1900, the world’s population was about 1.7 billion. During the twen- tieth century, it quadrupled to over 6 billion, due to p ...
In 1968, Paul Ehrlich published The Population Bomb,which put a modern take on Malthus. He argued that even a moderate 1.3 perce ...
replacement level of only two children per family. The organization’s website con- tains updates and policy briefs about differe ...
our most central social problems—crime, poverty, racial and ethnic antagonism, more crime. But it’s not one or the other—it’s bo ...
(about the size of Memphis, Tennessee, today) (Chandler, 1987). When the Industrial Revolution began around 1750, agricultural p ...
The most densely populated cities in the world are constricted; that is, there is no place for them to expand outward. Malé, cap ...
areas have higher rates of poverty than do urban areas, and rural Americans are more likely than city dwellers to use food stamp ...
flannel suits” and “Stepford wives.” But people still moved there in huge numbers. Why? Safety, or assumed safety—because cities ...
«
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
»
Free download pdf