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The Coming Population Crash: and Our Planet's Surprising Future
 
 
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The Coming Population Crash: and Our Planet's Surprising Future [Hardcover]

Fred Pearce (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 1, 2010 0807085839 978-0807085837
Demography is destiny. It underlies many of the issues that shake the world, from war and economics to immigration. No wonder, then, that fears of overpopulation flared regularly over the last century, a century that saw the world's population quadruple. Even today, baby booms are blamed for genocide and terrorism, and overpopulation is regularly cited as the primary factor driving global warming and other environmental issues.

Yet, surprisingly, it appears that the explosion is past its peak. Around the world, in developing countries as well as in rich ones, today's women are having on average 2.6 children, half the number their mothers had. Within a generation, world fertility will likely follow Europe's to below replacement levels—and by 2040, the world's population will be declining for the first time since the Black Death, almost seven hundred years ago.

In The Coming Population Crash, veteran environmental writer Fred Pearce reveals the dynamics behind this dramatic shift. Charting the demographic path of our species over two hundred years, he begins by chronicling the troubling history of authoritarian efforts to contain the twentieth century's population explosion, as well as the worldwide trend toward the empowerment of women that led to lower birthrates. And then, with vivid reporting from around the globe, he dives into the environmental, social, and economic effects of our surprising demographic future.

Now is probably the last time in history that our world will hold more young people than elders. Most fear that an aging world population will put a serious drain on national resources, as a shrinking working population supports a growing number of retirees. But is this necessarily so? Might an older world population have an upside? Pearce also shows us why our demographic future holds increased migration rates, and reveals the hypocrisy at the heart of anti-immigrant rhetoric in the developed world: the simple fact is that countries with lower birthrates need workers and countries with higher birthrates need work. And he tackles the truism that population density always leads to environmental degradation, taking us from some of the world's most densely packed urban slums to rural Africa to argue that underpopulation can sometimes be the cause of environmental woes, while cities could hold the key to sustainable living.

Pearce's provocative book is essential reading for anyone who wants to know what demographics tell us about our global future, and for all those who believe in learning from the mistakes of the past.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Demography is destiny. But not always in the way we imagine, begins Pearce (When the Rivers Run Dry) in his fascinating analysis of how global population trends have shaped, and been shaped by, political and cultural shifts. He starts with Robert Malthus, whose concept of overpopulation—explicitly of the uneducated and poor classes—and depleted resources influenced two centuries of population and environmental theory, from early eugenicists (including Margaret Sanger) to the British colonial administrators presiding over India and Ireland. Pearce examines the roots of the incipient crash in global population in decades of mass sterilizations and such government interventions as Mao's one child program. Many nations are breeding at less then replacement numbers (including not only the well-publicized crises in Western Europe and Japan, but also Iran, Australia, South Africa, and possibly soon China and India). Highly readable and marked by first-class reportage, Pearce's book also highlights those at the helm of these vastly influential decisions—the families themselves, from working-class English families of the industrial revolution to the young women currently working in the factories of Bangladesh. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Angst about overpopulation has been a staple of apocalyptic prediction since Thomas Malthus warned in the early 1800s of too many mouths and too little food. The worry is essentially unjustified, maintains Pearce, who critiques Malthus and his successors in a work perhaps most pertinent to environmentalists. For he is one in good standing as author of many books about climate change (When the Rivers Run Dry, 2006), and he recognizes that environmentalists have been in the forefront of population-control advocacy at least since the publication of Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb (1969). Pearce makes his case on the grounds of demography, beginning with a historical review that emphasizes promoters of controlling the number of births, namely eugenicists and contraceptive campaigners. A world traveler, Pearce visits regions of undeniably high contemporary population growth—India, Bangladesh, and Africa—and adduces anecdotes to support the statistical trends that he describes. The signs all point toward world population cresting soon, with Pearce citing declining fertility rates, aging baby boomers, and migration in this optimistic perspective. --Gilbert Taylor

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 312 pages
  • Publisher: Beacon Press (April 1, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0807085839
  • ISBN-13: 978-0807085837
  • Product Dimensions: 6.2 x 1.1 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #869,550 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Fred Pearce is a former news editor at New Scientist. Currently that magazine's environment and development consultant, he has also written for Audubon, Popular Science, Time, the Boston Globe, and Natural History. His books include With Speed and Violence, When the Rivers Run Dry, Keepers of the Spring, Turning Up the Heat, and Deep Jungle. He lives in England.

 

Customer Reviews

22 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Is optimism justified?, July 22, 2010
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This review is from: The Coming Population Crash: and Our Planet's Surprising Future (Hardcover)
Fred Pearce has written a wonderfully readable and information-packed analysis of the untouchable population issue. It deserves praise for breaking the ice, allowing the ugly truth to surface. Demography is demonstrated as a powerful explanatory force, and a guide to policy making in the making, if we will only pay it attention. I can't say enough good about this book. My only criticism is of the optimistic undercurrent of the book, a property that other reviewers have lauded but which in my opinion sweeps truth at last exposed back under the rug. In several sections I cringed as Pearce time and again boarded the train of politically correct. "Multhusian doomsters" are evil eugenicists, confusing the mathematics of exponential growth with a matter of opinion. The Irish potato famine could not have been "Malthusian" says Pearce, because the blight still would have killed a smaller Ireland. A less than impartial Pearce places the blame on Britain's response to the crisis, and not on the origins and dangers of a potato monoculture. Opposition to immigration is viewed as "nasty stuff", missing the connection between Hardin's "Tragedy of the commons" and a world without effective borders. I would have loved it if Pearce had withheld judgment on the so-called Malthusians, which in my mind are just believers in math. But I admit, a storyline without a "bad guy" is not nearly as compelling.

It is true that there are reasons to be optimistic, but optimism itself, spreading like chain mail, can defuse the pessimism that has led to smaller families.
In all likelihood, the crash will be far worse than Pearce predicts, and we will not be saved by a decrease in fertility alone, because, as he covers very well, we are degrading the ability of the planet to make food. But for all of its understandable hopefulness, the book presents a future that is far less Pollyanna than the mindless projections of the UNFPA. For that, and for being eminently mindful, it deserves high praise and readership.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Enlightening but deeply flawed, August 7, 2010
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This review is from: The Coming Population Crash: and Our Planet's Surprising Future (Hardcover)

This is an excellent book for readers interested in the future of the planet and how population will effect our world yet in a way it is deeply flawed. Its strength lies in the color it provides in humanizing and understanding the factors effecting population growth and birth rates and how varied different societies are. If one were to look at world population as a beach Pearce samples different grains of sand from Bombay slums to Israeli Hasidic communities providing a loving understanding of what makes them what they are. The weakness of the book is that after examining the grains of sand he doesn't discuss the beach. The author is so afraid that the reader will, like Malthus, demonize the poor that he devotes less than a page to world population forecasts and the possible consequences. Pearce is also quick to find racism in every movement that concerned itself with population growth from planned parenthood to the Sierra club.

It is interesting and well written so I recommend it but a more balanced approach to the implications of current population trends would have been nice.
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23 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Now the best book on population, March 16, 2010
By 
Stewart Brand (Sausalito, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Coming Population Crash: and Our Planet's Surprising Future (Hardcover)
I judge books by how dog-eared they are when I finish them and whether I buy copies to press into the hands of colleagues and friends. This book soars in both categories.

I've been active in population politics and recently wrote about the subject in my own book (Whole Earth Discipline). I wish to hell I'd had Pearce's book in hand when I was writing, because he produces no end of important news on the subject, including the deep streak of eugenics wrong theory that has nearly poisoned the subject ever since Malthus. (Applause to HG Wells for seeing through the pious racism back when everyone thought it was obvious truth.)

This is a great book on a crucial subject.
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