This book deals in a balanced and foresightful manner with the large and accelerating flows of low-income Third World people to the rich nations of the industrialized West. Few global flows are so profoundly political, so human, so certain to be of growing importance, so mind-boggling. This a breathtaking book, in both the scope of its coverage and the depth of its analysis.

- Michael S. Teitelbaum, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation,

The earth’s five billion people are linked in a complex web that serves to shape population movements and patterns of births and deaths. In this book, nine experts illuminate the nature of this interplay linking rich and poor countries.The demographic experience of each nation occurs in a larger context of social, political, economic, cultural, religious, military, and biological forces. On the premise that local population trends cannot be understood apart from such structural and historical factors, the book explores both the highly visible and the more subtle forms of demographic interplay, from the large recent flows of migrants and refugees to smaller yet still important flows such as those of tourists and governments-in-exile, from international shifts in the terms of trade to international programs of population control. It examines the historical roots and contemporary trends of these developments and probes their likely future courses.The distinguished contributors present here some of the best writing to date on the topic: William H. McNeill on population flows in premodern times, Orlando Patterson on interactions in the West Atlantic region, the late Hedley Bull on the relation between migration and present world structure, Aristide R. Zolberg on guestworker programs, Juergen B. Donges on trade policies and economic migration, William Alonso on changing definitions of the identity of populations, Hans-Joachim Hoffmann-Nowotny on social and cultural dilemmas facing northern Europe, Francis X. Sutton on government policy issues, Myron Weiner on emigration and Third World development. Also discussed are the effects of medical advances on population growth, the implications of differing fertility rates, and the impact of the post-1945 transition from colonial empires to nation-states.Too often such issues have been treated in disconnected fashion and viewed only as problems of the moment. As this outstanding book shows, they are richly intertwined, both with one another and with the history of world development.
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Earth’s human population inhabits a complex web shaping population movements and patterns of births and deaths. Nine experts explore the nature of the interplay linking rich and poor countries. The demographic experience of each nation occurs in a larger context of social, political, economic, cultural, religious, military, and biological forces.
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* Introduction: Population North and South William Alonso I. History and Structure * Migration in Premodern Times William H. McNeill * Wanted but Not Welcome: Alien Labor in Western Development Aristide R. Zolberg * Population and the Present World Structure Hedley Bull * Identity and Population William Alonso II. Economics, Politics, and Community * International Migration and the International Division of Labor Juergen B. Donges * Social Integration and Cultural Pluralism: Structural and Cultural Problems of Immigration in European Industrial Countries Hans-Joachim Hoffmann-Nowotny * International Emigration and the Third World Myron Weiner * Refugees and Mass Exoduses: The Search for a Humane, Effective Policy Francis X. Sutton * The Emerging West Atlantic System: Migration, Culture, and Underdevelopment in the United States and the Circum-Caribbean Region Orlando Patterson * Bibliography * Contributors * Index
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This book deals in a balanced and foresightful manner with the large and accelerating flows of low-income Third World people to the rich nations of the industrialized West. Few global flows are so profoundly political, so human, so certain to be of growing importance, so mind-boggling. This a breathtaking book, in both the scope of its coverage and the depth of its analysis.
Les mer
This book deals in a balanced and foresightful manner with the large and accelerating flows of low-income Third World people to the rich nations of the industrialized West. Few global flows are so profoundly political, so human, so certain to be of growing importance, so mind-boggling. This a breathtaking book, in both the scope of its coverage and the depth of its analysis. -- Michael S. Teitelbaum
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780674690080
Publisert
1987-04-28
Utgiver
Vendor
Harvard University Press
Vekt
635 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
296

Redaktør

Om bidragsyterne

William Alonso was Richard Saltonstall Professor of Population Policy and directed the Center for Population Studies at the Harvard School of Public Health.